Author Topic: Out of the Loop: What the Saudi Attacks Tell Us About the Future of Conflict  (Read 134 times)

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Out of the Loop: What the Saudi Attacks Tell Us About the Future of Conflict
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By Eliot Pence
October 01, 2019


The Abqaiq attacks this month raised many questions. Who did it? How did they do it? What did they do it with? One question was notably absent: Why couldn't Saudi Arabia stop it? The answer is not straightforward, nor is it necessarily clear that anything could have stopped it. After all, the Kingdom spends as much as any country on defense.

The uncomfortable reality is that no one knows how to deal with this threat. It is not just the Saudis. American military bases in the Middle East were likely equally exposed. Inexpensive, asymmetric, ubiquitous threats traveling at high speeds is a hard problem. They resemble something similar to an emergent property, in which simple entities (drones and cruise missiles, for example) operate in an ecosystem, forming more complex behaviors as a collective. Stopping one drone may have not been a challenge. Stopping 17 drones and eight cruise missiles launched together confusing radars, communications infrastructure, and human operators all at once are. Whether we like it or not, when it comes to this new era of defense, humans can be just as much the problem as they are the solution.

https://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2019/10/01/out_of_the_loop_what_the_saudi_attacks_tell_us_about_the_future_of_conflict_114783.html