I have seen one LISN where the attenuator resistor got damaged (high value) and everyone thought passing EMC was a piece of cake, readings were quite low
If you look at the switch-in impulse of 50R resistor charging a 0.25uF cap to 170V, it is short duration and very peak high current, I think 160mApk for 20usec; 3.5mJ and 23W.
Any mains transient also hits the resistors.
When you pulse overload a resistor very briefly, it's a gray area because it's 100x rated power dissipation and the element can get damaged. Vishay is the only engineering group that gave me decent answers. I couldn't get pulse-overload data from other resistor manufacturers.
In the old days, you used a large carbon-comp through-hole resistor there and didn't worry about it.
GDT's are slowest, several usec to trigger depending on the voltage rise-time. They are also lowest capacitance, great for RF transceivers and lightning protection.
But here I think the GDT will trigger too late to protect the resistor, and the firing voltage is still substantial at say >90V. That's a bit much on a 50R resistor...