By Dr. James M. Minnich

HONOLULU — February 6, 2026

In the Indo-Pacific, security rarely fails in isolation. It fractures under pressure—when infrastructure collapses, when governance strains, and when multiple crises converge. Natural disasters expose these vulnerabilities with brutal clarity, often faster than conflict itself. In such moments, the credibility of institutions and partnerships is tested not by rhetoric, but by performance.

This article draws on insights from Dialogue Episode 53, Strategy in the Storm, convened by the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, featuring Joe Martin, Director of the Center for Excellence in Disaster Management and Humanitarian Assistance (CFE-DM). The discussion surfaced a central insight: disaster response is not a peripheral humanitarian activity; it is a strategic stress test of leadership, coordination, and regional partnerships.

Disasters as Strategic Stress Tests

This reality was underscored not only by singular catastrophes, but by recurring events—such as the succession of typhoons that struck the Philippines in 2024. In several instances, multiple storms made landfall within weeks, stressing national response systems, military logistics, and civil–military coordination simultaneously.

These events revealed that resilience is not tested by one disaster, but by accumulation. The challenge was less about surge capacity than endurance—how institutions sustained coordination, information flow, and leadership tempo across repeated shocks. As Martin noted during the discussion, countries that have invested in routine coordination and practiced integration were able to adapt more quickly, while others saw friction compound with each successive response.

The lesson is stark: no amount of surge capability can compensate for weak coordination or unpracticed partnerships when crises arrive back-to-back.

What Separates Real Partnerships from Rhetorical Ones

Effective partnerships under pressure share several defining characteristics.

First, they are built before the disaster. Martin noted that the worst moment to exchange business cards is at the scene of a catastrophe. Relationships forged through training, education, and repeated engagement allow responders to bypass friction when it matters most. Familiarity enables speed, and trust enables access.

Second, durable partnerships are production-based, not promise-based. Organizations that deliver tangible outputs—joint planning products, shared training curricula, co-authored reference materials—are far more likely to perform effectively in a crisis. These activities generate shared ownership and practical interoperability rather than abstract alignment.

Third, resilient partnerships respect sovereignty and localization. The most successful responses reinforce, rather than displace, local leadership. As Martin observed, local communities are always the first responders, and often the last to leave. External actors add value only when they integrate into existing national and provincial response mechanisms, rather than imposing parallel structures.

Coordination Over Capacity

A recurring theme in the discussion was that coordination matters as much as capacity. In the first 72 hours after a major disaster, information gaps—not resource shortages—often drive failure. Misaligned assistance, duplicated efforts, or poorly matched aid can actively worsen conditions, creating what responders call “the disaster after the disaster.”

Military forces, in particular, face a dual challenge. They bring unmatched logistics and lift capabilities, but their effectiveness depends on accurate needs assessments and disciplined restraint. Sending what is available, rather than what is required, can clog airfields, overwhelm local systems, and delay lifesaving support.

This is why institutions like CFE-DM focus less on rapid reaction and more on preparedness, integration, and rehearsal. Exercises, civil-military coordination training, and multinational planning frameworks are not academic activities; they are investments in decision-making under pressure.

These coordination challenges become even more acute when disasters unfold in politically or socially fragile environments.

Complex Disasters and the Security Environment

The Indo-Pacific increasingly faces compound crises in which natural disasters intersect with political fragility, social tensions, or localized insecurity. In these environments, humanitarian action cannot be separated from situational awareness.

The 2024 Enga Province landslide in Papua New Guinea illustrated how localized insecurity—such as checkpoints, tribal boundaries, and contested authority—can constrain access and complicate response even in the absence of formal conflict. For external responders, particularly military forces, operating in these spaces requires an understanding that disaster zones are rarely neutral terrain.

Training for such contingencies demands scenario-based planning that accounts for governance disruption, information uncertainty, and the risk of escalation. Leaders who have not practiced these scenarios should expect to be surprised—and surprise is costly in crisis response.

Disaster Response as Strategic Signaling

Humanitarian assistance produces strategic effects whether intended or not. Effective response builds credibility, reinforces access, and strengthens long-term relationships. Poorly coordinated response erodes trust and undermines influence.

Crucially, these effects do not require the politicization of aid. As Martin observed, multiple truths can coexist: assistance can be genuinely altruistic, reinforce alliances, and accelerate economic recovery simultaneously. Strategic impact emerges from competence and consistency, not from overt messaging.

In a region where disasters are frequent and expectations are rising, resilience has become a form of deterrence. States that can absorb shocks, recover quickly, and coordinate effectively reduce the risk of instability and external exploitation.

Over time, consistent performance in disaster response becomes a form of strategic signaling—quiet, credible, and difficult to counterfeit.

Conclusion

Disaster response in the Indo-Pacific is no longer episodic—it is structural. The region’s exposure to natural hazards ensures that crises will continue to arrive faster than institutions can improvise solutions. The difference between resilience and failure lies in preparation, partnership, and leadership under pressure.

As the Dialogue discussion made clear, resilience is not improvised in crisis. It is built deliberately, long before the storm arrives, through real partnerships, practiced coordination, and a shared commitment to action over rhetoric.

This article reflects the author’s analysis and does not represent the views of any institution or individual.