Could plentiful long-range anti-ship missiles make a Chinese amphibious invasion of Taiwan too difficult to execute?
It occurs to me that the Taiwanese eye of Sauron sitting on the Leshan Mountain, if it can provide targeting data for our submarine-launched cruise missiles and new (when deployed) air-launched missiles (LRSAM) plus Taiwanese cruise missiles, might chew up a Chinese invasion armada enough that Taiwan's army could repulse any troops that make it ashore.
Protecting (or destroying, from the mainland perspective) that radar becomes more important, of course, if that is the case.
It just might come to pass that the main Chinese capability to subdue Taiwan will be a blockade of the island that breaks Taiwan before a counter-blockade breaks China's will to continue the fight.
And if China starts looking inland more, that might save tiny Taiwan from the Leviathan across the strait.