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Panorama of Taipei Downtown at Sunset, Taiwan

What Intelligence Failures in the Cuban Missile Crisis Can Tell Us About the US, China, and Taiwan

The Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962 is typically remembered as a moment when intelligence succeeded. U-2 imagery revealed Soviet missiles in Cuba before they became operational, preserving enough time for Kennedy to impose a naval quarantine and negotiate withdrawal. Yet this success followed weeks of systematic misjudgement. The British Joint Intelligence Committee assessed Soviet activity as defensive aid well into September, even as evidence accumulated of surface-to-air missile sites and unusual construction. American estimates judged a clandestine medium-range ballistic missile deployment ‘unlikely’ until photographic confirmation forced reassessment.[1] The delay was structural rather than accidental, rooted in cognitive shortcuts, institutional caution, and Cold War identity scripts that limited what analysts considered possible.

These patterns matter because they recur. As Washington and Beijing construct competing narratives about Taiwan, with each framing the other as aggressor, each mobilising resources through vocabularies of threat, intelligence communities operate within similar constraints. The question is whether the structural biases that nearly delayed Western recognition of Soviet missiles in 1962 might delay recognition of Chinese preparations today, and whether belief will accelerate quickly enough to preserve decision time.

How Analysts See What They Expect

The JIC’s reporting in autumn 1962 was shaped by anchoring. In August, as Soviet shipping to Cuba intensified, the JIC judged the activity consistent with defensive arms transfers, a framing that persisted even as evidence accumulated of surface-to-air missile sites.[2] Once an initial hypothesis is formed, analysts interpret subsequent information through that lens in what Heuer termed theory-driven thinking.[3] Analysts also treated the scale of Soviet shipments as unproblematic, dismissing missing economic justification and thereby reinforcing a false coherence in their ‘defensive’ narrative.[4]

These cognitive tendencies continue to operate today. Current assessments of Chinese military activity around Taiwan are filtered through established frameworks about deterrence and Beijing’s presumed rationality. Analysts assume that any move against Taiwan would be telegraphed by large-scale mobilisation. Yet Moscow’s deployment to Cuba was itself a deviation from expected patterns, driven by logics of revolutionary identity and prestige that Western analysts struggled to accommodate.[5]

Chinese decision-making may likewise be guided by normative framings that diverge from Washington’s expectations. Beijing’s emphasis on ‘national rejuvenation’ and ‘reunification’ functions as an identity claim structuring what counts as legitimate behaviour and permissible risk.[6] If analysts anchor on Western deterrence logic, they may discount grey-zone escalation, fait accompli strategies, or calculated acceptance of short-term costs.

How Organisations Slow Belief

The JIC’s organisational form shaped how intelligence was used. As a coordination body dependent on service departments, consensus procedures meant to ensure coherence instead diluted confidence.[7] Within Whitehall’s hierarchy, reports were filtered through multiple clearances before reaching ministers, muting urgency.[8] Intelligence was expected to support existing orientations rather than drive policy, aligning with the government’s desire to avoid escalation.[9]

Contemporary intelligence structures face similar pressures. Political sensitivities around Taiwan create incentives for analytic caution. Assessments challenging prevailing assumptions risk dismissal as alarmist. The result is a ‘belief velocity’ problem, where accurate intelligence exists but moves too slowly through institutional filters to affect decision-making.[10]

This temporal gap proved nearly fatal in 1962. Intelligence moved at three speeds: analytical (fast), institutional (slow), and evidentiary (sudden, when U-2 photography forced reassessment).[11] The Taiwan scenario presents a compressed timeline where grey-zone operations might precede kinetic action by narrow margins. If institutional filters slow recognition as in 1962, decision time could evaporate before intelligence forces reassessment.

How Identity Scripts Limit Imagination

The JIC assumed Soviet behaviour would reflect Western rational calculus, mirroring British self-understanding as a status-quo power and discounting that Moscow might be guided by different logics of revolutionary identity.[12] In the United States, the Monroe Doctrine functioned as a core identity frame, defining the Western Hemisphere as an exclusive sphere and predisposing analysts to treat Soviet deployments as inherently illegitimate.[13]

Today’s rivalry operates through similar identity scripts. The American framing of China as a ‘pacing challenge’ functions as a securitising move, casting competition as existential and mobilising resources. Between May 2023 and March 2024, the Pacific Deterrence Initiative rose from $6.19 billion to $9.86 billion.[14] Beijing’s narrative of ‘great rejuvenation’ operates symmetrically, with Xi Jinping’s October 2022 report binding national modernisation to political authority.[15] By July 2024, a Central Military Commission directive ordered the PLA to ‘dare to fight and win to realise national rejuvenation’,[16] whilst Beijing launched a ¥344 billion semiconductor fund.[17]

These competing mythscapes create a spiral where each side’s defensive posturing is framed by the other as proof of malign intent, mirroring Jervis’s security dilemma.[18] Yet this is not simple misperception but deliberate political construction, converting structural anxiety into material commitments.[19]

For intelligence communities, assessments about Taiwan operate within politically charged frames. Chinese preparations might be read through Beijing’s lens as defensive reunification but appear in Washington as offensive expansionism. Intelligence will be interpreted through pre-existing scripts rather than allowed to challenge them. In 1962, incontrovertible photographic evidence was required to overcome normative assumptions, yet assessments still underestimated Soviet deployments.[20]

Belief Velocity and Decision Time

Intelligence in the Cuban crisis mattered through synchronicity rather than prediction. The combination of U-2 imagery and Oleg Penkovsky’s provision of R-12 missile manuals provided both confirmation and temporal calibration.[21] Richard Helms said the intelligence bought Kennedy ‘three extra days’, enabling measured response.[22]

Had discovery come only after missiles were operational, Washington’s choice set would have narrowed to a strike or acceptance. Had evidence arrived earlier, the Soviet leadership might have reacted less flexibly. Both scenarios pivot on timing of belief.[23]

This temporal dimension is critical for Taiwan. Chinese preparation would unfold across multiple domains with different observational signatures and lead times. Intelligence must integrate technical collection with political assessment fast enough to preserve decision time, yet the same institutional filters that delayed recognition in 1962 remain operative.

Post-crisis reforms tightened coordination and introduced clearer confidence statements, whilst satellite imagery gained priority.[24] Yet reforms could not resolve the tension that intelligence operates as political activity within political institutions.[25] Contemporary debates might benefit from recognising this constraint: improving tradecraft matters, but if institutional cultures reward consensus, systematic conservatism will persist.

Implications for Taiwan

Three implications emerge. First, analysts must guard against anchoring on assumptions about Chinese rationality or gradualism. Beijing’s decision calculus may be structured by normative commitments to ‘reunification’ that diverge from Western deterrence logic, requiring institutional capacity to question foundational assumptions.

Second, organisational structures must accelerate belief velocity by reducing institutional filters, creating direct channels for urgent assessments, and rewarding analysts who flag outlier scenarios. The Cuban crisis showed that consensus procedures can dilute warnings until events force reassessment. Taiwan’s compressed timeline may not afford that luxury.

Third, intelligence communities must recognise they operate within politically charged normative frames. The competing mythscapes of ‘pacing challenge’ and ‘great rejuvenation’ structure what seems imaginable, influencing which indicators receive attention. Intelligence cannot escape these frames but can work to make them explicit, flagging when assessments reflect identity scripts rather than evidence alone.

The Cuban Missile Crisis succeeded because intelligence preserved enough time for diplomacy, yet that success followed weeks of near-failure when cognitive shortcuts, institutional caution, and normative assumptions nearly foreclosed recognition. The structural biases that shaped 1962 remain operative. Whether intelligence about Taiwan will move fast enough depends on whether institutions can overcome the same filters that nearly delayed belief in October 1962.


Bibliography

Aldrich, Richard J., Rory Cormac, and Michael S. Goodman. Spying on the World: The Declassified Documents of the Joint Intelligence Committee, 1936–2013. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2014.

Allison, Graham T., and Philip Zelikow. Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis. 2nd ed. New York: Longman, 1999.

Bell, Duncan S. A. “Mythscapes: Memory, Mythology, and National Identity.” British Journal of Sociology 54, no. 1 (March 2003): 63–81.

Blight, James G., and David A. Welch. “What Can Intelligence Tell Us about the Cuban Missile Crisis, and What Can the Cuban Missile Crisis Tell Us about Intelligence?” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 1–17.

Buzan, Barry, Ole Wæver, and Jaap de Wilde. Security: A New Framework for Analysis. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 1998.

Central Military Commission. Decision on Deeply Advancing Political Training (中央军委印发《关于全面贯彻新时代政治建军方略深入推进军队政治整训的决定》). 10 July 2024. Accessed July 20, 2025. https://www.spp.gov.cn/spp/tt/202407/t20240710_660046.shtml.

Fischer, Beth A. “Perception, Intelligence Errors, and the Cuban Missile Crisis.” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 150–72.

Garthoff, Raymond L. “US Intelligence in the Cuban Missile Crisis.” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 18–63.

Herman, Michael. Intelligence Power in Peace and War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

Heuer, Richards J. Psychology of Intelligence Analysis. Washington, DC: CIA, 2021.

Hulnick, Arthur S. “What’s Wrong with the Intelligence Cycle.” Intelligence and National Security 21, no. 6 (2006): 959–79.

Jervis, Robert. Perception and Misperception in International Politics. New Edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976.

Reuters. “China Establishes Third Phase of National Integrated Circuit Investment Fund with $47.5 Billion.” May 27, 2024. Accessed August 11, 2025. https://www.business-standard.com/world-news/china-sets-up-third-fund-with-47-5-bn-to-boost-semiconductor-industry-124052700493_1.html.

Scott, Len. “Oleg Penkovsky, British Intelligence, and the Cuban Missile Crisis.” In Learning from the Secret Past: Cases in British Intelligence History, edited by Robert Dover and Michael S. Goodman, 226–48. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2011.

Scott, L. V. Macmillan, Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis: Political, Military and Intelligence Aspects. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 1999.

Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. Patriotic Education Law of the People’s Republic of China (中华人民共和国爱国主义教育法). Adopted October 24, 2023; effective January 1, 2024. Accessed July 20, 2025. http://www.npc.gov.cn/npc/c2/c30834/202310/t20231024_432535.html.

U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller). Pacific Deterrence Initiative: FY 2025 Budget Justification. Washington, DC: Department of Defense, March 2024. Accessed July 22, 2025. https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/FY2025/FY2025_Pacific_Deterrence_Initiative.pdf.

Wæver, Ole. “Securitization and Desecuritization.” In On Security, edited by Ronnie D. Lipschutz, 46–86. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.

Weldes, Jutta. Constructing National Interests: The United States and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999.

Xi Jinping. “全面建设社会主义现代化国家 全面推进中华民族伟大复兴——在中国共产党第二十次全国代表大会上的报告” [Report to the 20th CPC National Congress]. People’s Daily, 4 January 2023. Accessed July 20, 2025. https://www.gov.cn/xinwen/2022-10/25/content_5721685.htm.


[1]: Raymond L. Garthoff, “US Intelligence in the Cuban Missile Crisis,” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 20–22.

[2]: Richard J. Aldrich, Rory Cormac, and Michael S. Goodman, Spying on the World: The Declassified Documents of the Joint Intelligence Committee, 1936–2013 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2014), 249–52.

[3]: Richards J. Heuer, Psychology of Intelligence Analysis (Washington, DC: CIA, 2021), 91–92.

[4]: Ibid., 96–99.

[5]: Beth A. Fischer, “Perception, Intelligence Errors, and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 152–53.

[6]: Fischer, “Perception, Intelligence Errors,” 153.

[7]: Jutta Weldes, Constructing National Interests: The United States and the Cuban Missile Crisis (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999), 30–35, 224–39.

[8]: Duncan S. A. Bell, “Mythscapes: Memory, Mythology, and National Identity,” British Journal of Sociology 54, no. 1 (March 2003): 74.

[9]: Arthur S. Hulnick, “What’s Wrong with the Intelligence Cycle,” Intelligence and National Security 21, no. 6 (2006): 959–63.

[10]: Aldrich et al., Spying on the World, 252–54.

[11]: Hulnick, “What’s Wrong with the Intelligence Cycle,” 959–63.

[12]: Aldrich et al., Spying on the World, 252–54.

[13]: Philip H. J. Davies, MI6 and the Machinery of Spying (London: Frank Cass, 2004), 77–80.

[14]: Aldrich et al., Spying on the World, 10–23.

[15]: Hulnick, “What’s Wrong with the Intelligence Cycle,” 961–62.

[16]: This concept draws on Heuer’s account of how vivid evidence overcomes analytic inertia. Heuer, Psychology of Intelligence Analysis, 91–97.

[17]: James G. Blight and David A. Welch, “What Can Intelligence Tell Us about the Cuban Missile Crisis, and What Can the Cuban Missile Crisis Tell Us about Intelligence?” Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 3 (1998): 1–3.

[18]: Heuer, Psychology of Intelligence Analysis, 91–97.

[19]: Fischer, “Perception, Intelligence Errors,” 153.

[20]: Weldes, Constructing National Interests, 30–35, 224–39.

[21]: Aldrich et al., Spying on the World, 251–54.

[22]: Ole Wæver, “Securitization and Desecuritization,” in On Security, ed. Ronnie D. Lipschutz (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995), 54–55.

[23]: U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), Pacific Deterrence Initiative: FY 2025 Budget Justification (Washington, DC: Department of Defense, March 2024), 3.

[24]: Xi Jinping, “全面建设社会主义现代化国家 全面推进中华民族伟大复兴——在中国共产党第二十次全国代表大会上的报告” [Report to the 20th CPC National Congress], People’s Daily, 4 January 2023, 1.

[25]: Central Military Commission, Decision on Deeply Advancing Political Training (10 July 2024), art. 2.

China/USA Flags

Are the US and China Destined for War?

1. Destiny as Political Technology

Debates about whether the United States and China are ‘destined for war’ are usually cast in realist terms, with inevitability flowing from systemic anarchy and power transition. This essay argues instead that the language of destiny is not a structural fact but a political technology, through which each nation secures ontological survival. The American trope of a ‘pacing challenge’ and China’s invocation of ‘great rejuvenation’ function less as neutral diagnoses than as identity scripts, mobilising resources and legitimising extraordinary measures by presuming the other as antagonist. Rivalry is enacted through discursive performance, a struggle to sustain national being by scripting an enemy whose existence makes one coherent. The task is not to weigh whether realism predicts war, but to show how the vocabulary of destiny accelerates confrontation by producing the peril it claims merely to describe.

The analysis traces these dynamics: in Washington, the ‘pacing challenge’ from its 2023 Senate debut into the 2024 NDAA and FY 2025 budget; in Beijing, the ‘great rejuvenation’ from Xi’s early speeches into the 20th Party Congress and strategic industrial mobilisation. These discursive trajectories show how fatalistic language generates material outcomes, undermining the realist claim that rivalry is foreordained by structure alone.

2. The Realist Script

The ‘inevitability’ claim stems from neorealism, which holds that in an anarchic system, the security dilemma makes great power competition endemic. Despite realist debates over power-maximisation versus security-seeking, Mearsheimer’s ‘tragedy’ thesis has become the dominant framework for understanding US-China competition as structurally determined.[1]

Power-transition logic predicts that when a rising challenger closes on an established hegemon, war becomes more probable.[2] In today’s constellation China is the ascendant power, the United States the reigning one. From a realist vantage point, their collision flows from structure, not miscalculation or malice.[3]

This analytical framework is elegant and influential, yet its concepts become politically performative when adopted by policymakers. In shaping the reality they purport to describe, realists confirm the constructivist critique of its supposed neutrality. As early as 1983, Ullman warned that equating security with military power ‘conveys a profoundly false image of reality’ and militarises U.S. policymaking.[4]

3. Narrative as Political Technology

The realist script explains structural conditions for rivalry but says little about how states translate them into policy. As Buzan observed, structural theories risk treating states as interchangeable units, overlooking the domestic cohesion that shapes how external pressures are processed.[5] Rather than abandoning realism, this essay interrogates its performative dimension: how its concepts function once mobilised by political elites. To that end, it employs two constructivist tools – ‘securitisation’ and the ‘illocutionary speech act’ – to show how the language of destiny operates as political technology.

Securitisation theory describes how a ‘securitising actor’ frames an issue as an existential threat to a ‘referent object’.[6] This is achieved via an illocutionary speech act,[7] which distinguishes a statement that merely describes the world (a locutionary act) and one that performs an action by being uttered (an illocutionary act).[8] For a securitising move to be successful, it must be accepted by a relevant audience, such as the legislature or the public.[9] This focus on existential threat and emergency action lifts an issue ‘above politics’.[10]

These theoretical tools show how realism’s vocabulary of threat and competition can be instrumentalised as political technology. As Ole Wæver observes, securitising actors draw on established discourses to lend scientific legitimacy and urgency to political projects, making budgetary priorities appear matters of survival rather than discretion.[11] Such framing maps onto what Duncan Bell terms the ‘mythscape’, that of collectively rehearsed national destinies that render compromise suspect.[12] In this instance, Washington’s narrative of a ‘pacing challenge’ and Beijing’s of a ‘great rejuvenation’ function as mythscapes, each defining a national project that presumes the other as an obstacle.

4. Micro-Process Traces

This claim can be demonstrated by tracing key securitising phrases from high-level rhetoric through policy documents to material outcomes for both China and the US.[13]

4.1. The U.S. Trace

On 16 May 2023, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told the Senate Appropriations Committee that ‘the PRC is our pacing challenge’ and cast the US$842 billion request as strategy-driven rather than discretionary.[14] The cue framed the budget as structured by great-power competition and invited institutional uptake.

Seven months later, Congress authorises the frame’s operational centre of gravity in the FY2024 National Defense Authorization Act. The Joint Explanatory Statement creates an Indo-Pacific Campaigning Initiative, notes a request of US$786.2 million for USINDOPACOM campaigning, and adds a further US$508 million across the services.[15] The same statement extends and endorses the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and provides a budgetary display keyed to that rubric.[16] While the statute does not use the precise phrase ‘pacing challenge’, the conferees state that PDI will ‘prioritize Department of Defense efforts… enhancing U.S. deterrence and defense posture… and increasing readiness and capability in the Indo-Pacific region, primarily west of the International Date Line.’[17]

Material conversion follows in appropriations in March 2024, when Division A of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act enacts the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2024.[18] DoD’s FY2025 Pacific Deterrence Initiative book then repeats Austin’s formula, opening with ‘The Department is prioritizing the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as its pacing challenge’, and records a PDI display of roughly US$9.06 billion in FY2024 (request) and US$9.86 billion in FY2025.[19] On DoD’s own display, PDI rose from US$6.19 bn (FY2023) to US$9.06 bn (FY2024) and US$9.86 bn (FY2025), representing a 46% jump, then a further 9% after ‘pacing challenge’ entered executive rhetoric.

The sequence of speech → legislation → outlays, shows how pacing challenge discourse directly precipitates, rather than merely predicts, a more muscular U.S. posture in the Indo-Pacific.

4.2. The China Trace

The Chinese narrative begins with Xi Jinping’s report to the 20th Party Congress (16 Oct 2022; People’s Daily ed. 4 Jan 2023), which named as its ‘central task’ as ‘以中国式现代化全面推进中华民族伟大复兴’ (advancing the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation).[20] The declaration is illocutionary: by stating the goal, Xi performs the act of binding national modernisation to the Party’s political authority, framing it as a collective leap toward an historic destiny.

Twelve months later, on 24 October 2023, the Patriotic Education Law made the slogan official, obliging schools, media and museums to ‘carry forward the spirit of rejuvenation’.[21] Its Support-and-Guarantee chapter created a legal basis for future appropriations without specifying amounts. In January 2025 the Ministry of Education announced a central special fund for patriotic-education projects.[22]

In July 2024 the narrative moved from law to mobilisation. Han Zheng’s keynote to the 12th World Peace Forum (4 July) warned of ‘外部遏制’ (external containment) and urged a ‘shared-destiny community’,[23] while a Central Military Commission directive (10 July) ordered the PLA to ‘敢打必胜,以实现中华民族伟大复兴’ (dare to fight and win to realise national rejuvenation).[24] Both were illocutionary, instructing audiences to act to realise the rejuvenation they proclaim.

By mid-2025 the Support-and-Guarantee provisions had moved to practice, extending beyond cultural projects into large-scale industrial mobilisation. Xi Jinping’s calls for ‘independent and controllable’ core technologies as a pillar of the ‘great rejuvenation’ were codified in the 14th Five-Year Plan’s directive to accelerate semiconductor self-sufficiency.[25] In May 2024 Beijing launched the third phase of the National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund with registered capital of ¥344 billion (US $47.5 billion).[26] Official discourse cast it as both for  ‘external containment’ and for technological rejuvenation, funnelling resources into chip fabrication, research and design. Like the PDI, it converts a securitising slogan into multi-billion-dollar mobilisation.

5. Spiral Dynamics

Viewed through this lens, the traces reveal a clear escalatory spiral. In classic security studies, such dynamics are often explained through the lens of misperception. Robert Jervis’s spiral model, for example, posits that a state’s defensive actions can be incorrectly seen by a rival as offensive threats, sparking a cycle of mutual fear and hostility.[27] This cognitive trap is reinforced by the structural realities of anarchy, what Barry Buzan terms the ‘defence dilemma’, where any increase in one state’s security can decrease the security of others.[28]

Yet the evidence here suggests something more deliberate than simple misperception. Escalation is not just a cognitive error but a political process, actively manufactured by securitising actors on both sides. The narratives in the traces act as political technologies, converting structural anxiety into material commitments.[29] This is how rivalry is discursively accelerated, where each side’s defensive posturing, justified by its ‘mythscape’,[30] is framed by the other as proof of malign intent, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.[31] This discursive process is not deterministic. In principle it contains a counter-logic, what Etzioni terms ‘mutually assured restraint’, where rivals may forgo certain deployments to signal moderation. Discourse, then, can serve as a political technology of restraint as well as acceleration.[32]

6. Counterargument & Limits

A structural realist might argue that the discourses traced above are mere epiphenomena. Austin invokes ‘pacing challenge’ and Xi proclaims ‘great rejuvenation’ because material competition already exists – Beijing’s defence spending reached $314 billion in 2024, while Washington spent $997 billion and restricted China’s semiconductor access.[33] From this view, the documentary traces merely show rhetoric following structure, rather than creating it.

This materialist account has considerable force. As Mearsheimer argues, capability aggregation creates fear regardless of stated intentions and states must assume the worst about rivals’ motives given the high stakes of survival.[34] The budget increases and industrial mobilisation could simply reflect rational responses to objective threats rather than discursive construction.

Yet this misses how discourse determines which capabilities become politically salient. China’s military spending represents 1.7% of GDP versus America’s 3.4%, showing that the threat requires discursive activation to justify emergency measures.[35] More tellingly, if structure determined discourse, we would expect consistent rhetoric across time. Instead, the ‘pacing challenge’ frame represents a specific choice to militarise competition beyond what capabilities alone would predict. As Krebs and Jackson demonstrate, such rhetorical moves can trap opponents ‘without the rhetorical materials to craft a socially sustainable rebuttal,’ creating policy lock-in that transcends material constraints.[36]

The traces themselves have limitations, as public documents may simply reflect post-hoc justifications. Correlation between rhetoric and budgets doesn’t prove causation and both may respond to classified assessments unavailable to researchers. Nevertheless, the pattern suggests discourse doesn’t replace material reality but shapes how ambiguous capabilities become actionable threats. War becomes not structurally inevitable but discursively accelerated.

7. Conclusions

The concept that the United States and China are destined for war is not an objective finding but a political construction. The securitising narratives of a ‘pacing challenge’ in Washington and a ‘great rejuvenation’ in Beijing are identity scripts, political technologies that mobilise domestic populations, legitimise extraordinary measures, and channel resources. Rather than operating in isolation, they are symbiotic, feeding a spiral dynamic where each side’s defensive posturing is read as proof of aggression and sustaining a prophesy of conflict.

This reveals realism’s blind spot. Once its concepts migrate into politics, they cease to describe and begin to perform. Rivalry is discursively accelerated through a struggle for ontological survival enacted through the vocabulary of destiny. Yet discourse can also contain its own counter-logic. The idea of mutually assured restraint shows that doctrines and slogans can be deployed not only to hasten confrontation but to slow it, acting as instruments of moderation. The choice between escalation and restraint thus lies less in structure than the narrative tools employed by each nation.

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United States. Congress. Joint Explanatory Statement to Accompany the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024. 118th Cong., 1st sess., December 2023. Washington, DC: Senate Committee on Armed Services. Accessed July 21, 2025. https://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/fy24_ndaa_joint_explanatory_statement.pdf

United States. Congress. Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024. Public Law 118-47, 23 March 2024. Division A, Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2024. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Publishing Office. Accessed July 21, 2025. https://www.congress.gov/118/plaws/publ47/PLAW-118publ47.pdf

U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller). Pacific Deterrence Initiative: FY 2025 Budget Justification. Washington, DC: Department of Defense, March 2024. Accessed July 22, 2025. https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/FY2025/FY2025_Pacific_Deterrence_Initiative.pdf

Wæver, Ole. ‘Securitization and Desecuritization.’ In On Security, edited by Ronnie D. Lipschutz, 46–86. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.

Williams, Michael C. ‘Words, Images, Enemies: Securitization and International Politics.’ International Studies Quarterly 47, no. 4 (December 2003): 511–531.

Xi Jinping. ‘全面建设社会主义现代化国家 全面推进中华民族伟大复兴——在中国共产党第二十次全国代表大会上的报告’ [Report to the 20th CPC National Congress]. People’s Daily, 4 January 2023. Accessed July 20, 2025. https://www.gov.cn/xinwen/2022-10/25/content_5721685.htm


[1] John J. Mearsheimer, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, Updated Edition (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2014), 265.

[2] John J. Mearsheimer, ‘Structural Realism,’ in International Relations Theories: Discipline and Diversity, ed. Timothy Dunne, Milja Kurki, and Steve Smith (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), 61.

[3] Mearsheimer, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, 284.

[4] Richard H. Ullman, ‘Redefining Security,’ International Security 8, no. 1 (Summer 1983): 129–30.

[5] Barry Buzan, People, States and Fear: An Agenda for International Security Studies in the Post-Cold War Era, 2nd ed. (Colchester: ECPR Press, 2007), 93.

[6] Ole Wæver, ‘Securitization and Desecuritization,’ in On Security, ed. Ronnie D. Lipschutz (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995), 54-55.

[7] J. L. Austin, How to Do Things with Words, ed. J. O. Urmson and Marina Sbisà (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975), 98-103.

[8] Michael C. Williams, ‘Words, Images, Enemies: Securitization and International Politics,’ International Studies Quarterly 47, no. 4 (2003): 514.

[9] Barry Buzan, Ole Wæver, and Jaap de Wilde, Security: A New Framework for Analysis (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 1998), 25.

[10] Williams, ‘Words, Images, Enemies,’ 515.

[11] Wæver. ‘Securitization and Desecuritization’. 54-55

[12] Duncan Bell, ‘Mythscapes: memory, mythology, and national identity’. British Journal of Sociology 54, no. 1 (March 2003): 74.

[13] These traces rely on publicly available documents and visible policy instruments. While this approach cannot capture all causal mechanisms or behind-closed-doors negotiations, the focus on high-profile securitising language and budgetary outcomes provides illustrative evidence of discursive materialisation. Fuller analysis would require elite interviews and comprehensive corpus analysis across classified materials.

[14] Lloyd J. Austin III, ‘Opening Testimony Before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense,’ 16 May 2023, 8.

[15] U.S. Congress, Joint Explanatory Statement to Accompany the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024, 317, 325.

[16] Ibid. PDI display/table.

[17] Ibid. §1302.

[18] Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, Pub. L. 118-47 (23 March 2024), Div. A.

[19] U.S. Department of Defense, Pacific Deterrence Initiative: FY 2025 Budget Justification, March 2024, 3.

[20] Xi Jinping, ‘全面建设社会主义现代化国家…,’ People’s Daily, 4 Jan 2023, 1.

[21] Standing Committee of the NPC, Patriotic Education Law of the PRC (24 Oct 2023), art. 8.

[22] Ministry of Education, ‘Reply to NPC Proposal #4957,’ 13 Jan 2025; Ministry of Education et al., ‘意见—高校思想政治工作体系,’ 15 May 2020, sec. III.4.

[23] Han Zheng, keynote, 12th World Peace Forum, 4 Jul 2024; Central Military Commission, Decision on Deeply Advancing Political Training (10 Jul 2024), art. 2.

[24] Central Military Commission, Decision on Deeply Advancing Political Training, 10 July 2024, art. 2.

[25] State Council of the People’s Republic of China, Outline of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021–2025) and Long-Range Objectives Through 2035, Part V, Chap. 15, Sec. 2.

[26] Reuters, ‘China Establishes Third Phase of National Integrated Circuit Investment Fund with $47.5 Billion,’ 27 May 2024.

[27] Robert Jervis, Perception and Misperception in International Politics, New Edition (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976), 62–76.

[28] Robert Jervis, ‘Cooperation Under the Security Dilemma,’ World Politics 30, no. 2 (January 1978): 169.

[29] Wæver. ‘Securitization and Desecuritization’. 55

[30] Bell, ‘Mythscapes’. 75.

[31] Jervis, Perception and Misperception, 69.

[32] Amitai Etzioni, ‘Mutually Assured Restraint: A New Approach for United States–China Relations,’ The Brown Journal of World Affairs 20, no. 2 (Spring/Summer 2014): 40–41.

[33] SIPRI, Trends in World Military Expenditure 2024 (Apr 2025), 2; Sujai Shivakumar and Charles Wessner, The Limits of Chip Export Controls (CSIS, 2025).

[34] Mearsheimer, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics, 271-272.

[35] SIPRI, Trends in World Military Expenditure 2024, 2.

[36] Ronald R. Krebs and Patrick T. Jackson, ‘Twisting Tongues and Twisting Arms: The Power of Political Rhetoric,’ European Journal of International Relations 13, no. 1 (2007): 36.

Russia/EU chess

Examining Europe’s proposed ‘re-armament surge’

Andrew Michta’s Helsinki-Commission briefing, available on YouTube and social media, urges Europe to accelerate the deployment of armour and air-defence to its eastern flank. His logistics are solid, yet the argument remains trapped in a materialist mindset. The Kremlin’s strategic theatre is part gun-count, part morality play; it must perform the role of a besieged civilisation to sustain elite cohesion and domestic consent (Giles, 2021). Moscow therefore magnifies even token NATO deployments, weaving them into a narrative of encirclement. Numbers certainly matter, but myths and interpretations drive policy.

Historically, Western analysis rarely pauses on this critical identity driver. Civilisational framings, or what Marlene Laruelle calls Russia’s “anti-liberal European” self-image (Laruelle, 2016), explain why deterrence sometimes falters when, on balance, an alliance should be the rational option. Michta’s focus on equipment and troop-tallies risks underestimating this discursive asymmetry.

NATO’s dilemma: choreographing presence

The security dilemma cannot just be wished away, but its social meaning can be reframed. NATO now plans to defend forward with rotating brigades rather than permanent garrisons. Visibility is deliberate: forces spend most of their time at home and surge only for exercises, reassuring Baltic publics while limiting imagery that feeds Moscow’s siege myth. Twenty-two Allies already meet the 2 per cent GDP benchmark, up from three a decade ago (NATO, 2024), yet credible posture still requires narrative discipline. Radical transparency, such as publishing force-flow schedules and live-streaming major drills, signals defensive intent and denies the Kremlin the fog in which worst-case fantasies multiply. A minimalist inspection regime, of the kind sketched in recent European Leadership Network workshops, could complement this by addressing Russian ontological insecurity without conceding capability (ELN, 2024).

Lessons from outside Europe

Wargames on a Taiwan contingency reinforce the logic. RAND analysts find that smart sea-mines, road-mobile fires and cheap drones raise the PLA’s operational risk more sharply than prestige carriers (RAND, 2023). Denial assets lower the escalatory temperature while still signalling resolve. Yet capability is not enough: Beijing will test whether the coalition’s political will is socially durable. Expanding informal constructs like AUKUS into routine crisis-response exercises needs to narrate a shared story of status-quo preservation rather than anti-China containment.

South Asia offers a counter-example. The 2025 India-Pakistan crisis, analysed at the Belfer Center, showed deterrence only holding once both sides satisfied domestic identity needs with symbolic strikes before back-channeling de-escalation (Belfer, 2025). Conversely, the Israel–Hezbollah dyad illustrates erosion: CSIS charts a steep rise in rocket exchanges as mutually reinforcing victim narratives demand ever larger demonstrations of “honour” (CSIS, 2024). Deterrence frays when stories that cultures tell themselves are left unmanaged.

Policy implication

Europe’s re-armament is necessary, but insufficient by itself. Credible high-readiness forces must be paired with an information architecture that denies Moscow the dramaturgy it craves. That means choreographed deployments, radical transparency, selective arms-control gestures and a public narrative that casts NATO as guardian of a plural security order, not the shadow of tomorrow’s invasion. Any deterrence strategy that ignores identity politics may well become an expensive repeat of history.


Bibliography

Belfer Center (2025) Escalation Gone Meta: Strategic Lessons from the 2025 India–Pakistan Crisis. Harvard Kennedy School.

CSIS (2024) The Coming Conflict with Hezbollah. Center for Strategic and International Studies.

European Leadership Network (2024) OSCE Workshop Report: Strengthening European Security Architecture.

Giles, K. (2021) What Deters Russia. Chatham House.

Laruelle, M. (2016) ‘Russia as an Anti-liberal European Civilisation’, in The New Russian Nationalism, Edinburgh University Press.

Michta, A. (2024) ‘Why NATO Must Step Up’, testimony to the U.S. Helsinki Commission.

NATO (2024) ‘Defence Expenditures and the 2 Per Cent Guideline’.

RAND Corporation (2023) These Technologies Could Defeat China’s Missile Barrage and Defend Taiwan.

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