A leader needs to have a good understanding of the activities required of those being lead. Computer guiding industrial robots seem to fit that requirement. A leader needs to be able to foresee interruptions in scheduled operations and, if not able to prevent it, devise a way to work around it. A computer could be programmed creatively to minimize downtime. However, given the unforeseeable can the computer quickly respond intuitively?
Intuition: ” The act or faculty of knowing or sensing without the use of rational processes; immediate cognition.” (The American Heritage Dictionary) Our brains cannot reach conclusions as fast as computers can, the limited speed of a nerve impulse and the use of rational processes delay the process. What appears from intuition has its basis brain activity and not from an external source (imho). It seems like intuition is a relative disadvantage.
While a single algorithm is incapable of accomplishing @talljasperman‘s goal, enough interconnected algorithms might be. Maybe it already has, but not in computers.