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Hindsight and Foresight: A Conceptual Framework for the Analysis of Surprise Attacks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Abstract
As a step toward further conceptualization and differentiation of the problem of surprise attacks, this article suggests a new framework for analyzing the assumptions of decision makers. Two main categories are distinguished: (i) strategic assumptions of possibilities—the explicit and implicit assumptions held by an “observing state” about the conditions and circumstances under which the “observed state” would strike; (2) tactical assumptions of actualities—assumptions that have become realities in the eyes of the observing state, or that are on the verge of realization. Five cases of failures in intelligence estimates are discussed: (1) the Barbarossa Operation; (2) the attack on Pearl Harbor; (3) the Chinese Intervention in the Korean War; (4) the Sino-Indian Border War of October 1962; (5) the Arab-Israeli War of October 1973.
The analysis indicates that in each case, when discrepancies existed between tactical assumptions of actualities and strategic assumptions of possibilities, the latter prevailed without reassessment of the situation.
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- Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1976
References
* Research contributing to this article was carried out under the auspices of the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. I wish to thank Raymond Tanter for having commented on an earlier draft.
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