--- title: "Mafia Empire, Sunk Costs, And The Taiwan Illusion" description: "The interview opens with Jiang's method and then keeps testing it across one pressure system. The Middle East stays volatile because trade, oil, and." source_title: "Professor Jiang Xueqin: The World Is About to Change" published_at: "2025-10-30" source_class: "interview" public_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/" markdown_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.md" text_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt" transcript_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/" transcript_markdown_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.md" transcript_text_url: "https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.txt" data_url: "https://jianglens.com/data/lens/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.json" source_url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y" --- # Mafia Empire, Sunk Costs, And The Taiwan Illusion > The interview opens with Jiang's method and then keeps testing it across one pressure system. The Middle East stays volatile because trade, oil, and eschatology all pile into the same ground. Ukraine becomes a NATO proxy war kept alive by sunk costs and alliance extortion. The U.S.-China relationship looks less like an inevitable clash than a rivalry inflated by elite dysfunction and media theater. By the time Taiwan arrives, Jiang's larger claim is clear: most of the conflict stories people consume hide a different game underneath. - Source: [Professor Jiang Xueqin: The World Is About to Change](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y) - Published: 2025-10-30, day precision - Human interview page: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/) - Interview Markdown: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.md](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.md) - Interview text: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) - Transcript page: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/) - Transcript Markdown: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.md](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.md) - Transcript text: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript.txt) - Interview JSON with transcript segments: [/data/lens/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.json](https://jianglens.com/data/lens/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.json) ## Thesis What makes this interview useful is not that Jiang covers many flashpoints. It is that he keeps reducing them to the same analytic discipline. Ask who the real players are, what they want, and what incentives make their behavior rational from inside the board. That method lets him treat the Middle East as a trade-oil-eschatology trap, Ukraine as a NATO war prolonged by sunk costs and American extortion, and the China-U.S. relationship as a problem of domestic corruption and staged rivalry more than civilizational necessity. The Taiwan answer then becomes the clearest compression of his whole frame: if invasion would worsen China's real strategic position, then the invasion story is probably serving somebody else's game. ## Core Reading Cyrus Janssen gives Jiang a very broad field: Iran, Gaza, Russia, NATO, China, Taiwan, and whatever future conflict should worry people most. Jiang's answer is that the field is not broad at all once you start asking game-theory questions. States are players with interests, constraints, and preferred outcomes. The Middle East stays explosive because trade routes, oil, and apocalyptic religion all concentrate there. Ukraine keeps burning because NATO and Europe cannot walk away from sunk costs. China and the United States still need each other more than their media machines admit. And Taiwan matters not because Beijing is eager to invade, but because the invasion story hides the larger strategic balance China is actually trying to preserve. Sources: [1:38 seg-0005](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0005) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=98s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0005`; [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006`; [4:57 seg-0010](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0010) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=297s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0010`; [11:20 seg-0020](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0020) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=680s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0020`; [17:36 seg-0031](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0031) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1056s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0031`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038`; [32:31 seg-0054](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0054) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1951s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0054` ## In This Interview - [01:38-05:08](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=98s) - Game Theory Begins With Players, Then Runs Into The Middle East: Jiang defines his method in simple terms, then immediately uses it to explain why the Middle East remains structurally conflict-prone. - [05:08-07:32](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=308s) - Ceasefire Fails When Internal Incentives Favor War: The Gaza section matters less as a diplomacy update than as an example of Jiang's insistence that domestic fracture can overpower public peace language. - [08:18-16:51](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=498s) - Ukraine Stops Looking Bilateral And Starts Looking Imperial: Jiang treats the Ukraine war as a NATO conflict financed and directed through proxies, then widens that claim into a harsher model of American alliance management. - [13:29-20:38](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=809s) - Sunk Costs Keep The War Going To Odessa: The second Ukraine block turns battlefield pessimism into a theory of why obviously losing wars can still drag on for years. - [20:38-28:20](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1238s) - Rapprochement Starts Where Bullying Stops Working: The middle interview pivot turns the great-power rivalry frame inside out: China and the United States are portrayed as structurally interdependent, with elite corruption and media theater driving much of the hostility. - [28:20-38:18](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1700s) - Taiwan Reveals The Difference Between A Threat Story And A Real Game: The final major geopolitical sequence argues that China benefits more from the current balance than from war, then ends by widening the frame from nation-state conflict to shared planetary risk. ## Quotable Evidence From This Reading These cards connect the compressed reading to exact source coordinates. Use the summary and related lens links as the interpretive map; use the transcript and video links when quoting or attributing claims to Jiang. 1. Core Reading Quote: "I see geopolitics as a game among different players." Transcript: [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 2. Core Reading Quote: "Russia has been fighting NATO all this time" Transcript: [9:48 seg-0018](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0018-chunk-002) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=591s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=591s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0018` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) Related lens: [Game Theory](https://jianglens.com/docs/lens/game-theory.txt#game-theory-proxy-war-real-player) 3. Core Reading Quote: "it would be idiotic to go invade Taiwan" Transcript: [29:20 seg-0050](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0050-chunk-002) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1762s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1762s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0050` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) Related lens: [Game Theory](https://jianglens.com/docs/lens/game-theory.txt#game-theory-threat-story-real-game) 4. Core Reading Quote: "Absolutely, absolutely. Well, Professor, you know, I think what a lot of people have really taken notice on your YouTube channel is..." Transcript: [1:38 seg-0005](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0005-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=98s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=98s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0005` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 5. Core Reading Quote: "I see geopolitics as a game among different players. These players have their own strategies, have their own interests, and they're trying..." Transcript: [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 6. Game Theory Begins With Players, Then Runs Into The Middle East: Asked to apply that method to the Middle East, he does not start with personalities or daily headlines. Quote: "the center of global conflict for the next 10, 20 years" Transcript: [4:57 seg-0010](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0010) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=297s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=297s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0010` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 7. Game Theory Begins With Players, Then Runs Into The Middle East: Asked to apply that method to the Middle East, he does not start with personalities or daily headlines. Quote: "That was an amazing time to see that, you know, that the United States would attack Iran. How are you looking right..." Transcript: [2:49 seg-0007](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0007-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=169s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=169s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0007` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 8. Ceasefire Fails When Internal Incentives Favor War: When Janssen asks whether the current Israel-Hamas ceasefire can hold, Jiang answers with hope first and then with incentives. Quote: "So do you think that right now, what do you know, what, how do you predict the future with, I say Israel..." Transcript: [5:08 seg-0011](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0011-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=308s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=308s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0011` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 9. Ceasefire Fails When Internal Incentives Favor War: That is why his pessimism is not merely emotional. Quote: "the ethnic cleansing of Gaza" Transcript: [7:25 seg-0014](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0014-chunk-003) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=450s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=450s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0014` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 10. Ceasefire Fails When Internal Incentives Favor War: That is why his pessimism is not merely emotional. Quote: "Look, the reality is that Israel cannot afford a peace, uh, especially on Yahoo. Um, and what's even worse is that after..." Transcript: [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 11. Ukraine Stops Looking Bilateral And Starts Looking Imperial: Asked to explain Russia and Ukraine through game theory, Jiang says the war cannot be read as a simple two-party national conflict. Quote: "We've seen the United States obviously has been dragged in. I mean, it has been the number one supporter of NATO. We've..." Transcript: [8:18 seg-0016](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0016-chunk-001) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=498s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=498s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0016` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) 12. Ukraine Stops Looking Bilateral And Starts Looking Imperial: The section then hardens into a regime diagnosis. Quote: "It's a mafia empire." Transcript: [10:34 seg-0019](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0019-chunk-014) Video: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=664s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=664s) Source ref: `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0019` Episode reading: [/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.txt) Related lens: [Game Theory](https://jianglens.com/docs/lens/game-theory.txt#game-theory-proxy-war-real-player); [Imperial Retrenchment And Proxy Attrition](https://jianglens.com/docs/lens/imperial-retrenchment-and-proxy-attrition.txt#strategy-vassal-proxy-attrition) ## Reading ### Game Theory Begins With Players, Then Runs Into The Middle East Time: 01:38-05:08 Summary: Jiang defines his method in simple terms, then immediately uses it to explain why the Middle East remains structurally conflict-prone. The host begins by asking Jiang to explain why game theory has become his main instrument. Jiang's answer is clean and durable. Geopolitics is a game among players. Each player has strategies, interests, and an outcome it wants to optimize. The analyst's job is therefore not to moralize from the outside but to study history, internal politics, and preferred end states until apparently chaotic behavior starts to look legible. Sources: [1:38 seg-0005](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0005) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=98s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0005`; [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006` Asked to apply that method to the Middle East, he does not start with personalities or daily headlines. He starts with structure. The region sits on trade chokepoints, carries a huge share of the world's oil significance, and remains loaded with eschatological religion. For Jiang those three elements are enough to explain why every promised peace keeps running into something older and harder than diplomacy. Sources: [2:49 seg-0007](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0007) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=169s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0007`; [3:10 seg-0008](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0008) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=190s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0008`; [4:05 seg-0009](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0009) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=245s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0009`; [4:57 seg-0010](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0010) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=297s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0010` ### Ceasefire Fails When Internal Incentives Favor War Time: 05:08-07:32 Summary: The Gaza section matters less as a diplomacy update than as an example of Jiang's insistence that domestic fracture can overpower public peace language. When Janssen asks whether the current Israel-Hamas ceasefire can hold, Jiang answers with hope first and then with incentives. He says everyone should want peace after so much suffering in Gaza, but he does not think wanting peace is the same as having a stable game that rewards it. Israel's internal political fracture, Netanyahu's legal danger, and militant actors who do not want de-escalation all push in the opposite direction. Sources: [5:08 seg-0011](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0011) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=308s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0011`; [5:39 seg-0012](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0012) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=339s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0012`; [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013` That is why his pessimism is not merely emotional. He says game theory and recent ceasefire history both point in the same direction: peace language can sit on top of an incentive structure built for resumed strikes. The most inflammatory line in the section comes at the end, where he says anti-peace elements inside the Israeli military want the war resolved through Gaza's destruction rather than settlement. Even where one disagrees, the logic of the answer is consistent: internal political payoffs govern the battlefield more than the public ritual of peacemaking. Sources: [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013`; [7:25 seg-0014](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0014) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=445s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0014` ### Ukraine Stops Looking Bilateral And Starts Looking Imperial Time: 08:18-16:51 Summary: Jiang treats the Ukraine war as a NATO conflict financed and directed through proxies, then widens that claim into a harsher model of American alliance management. Asked to explain Russia and Ukraine through game theory, Jiang says the war cannot be read as a simple two-party national conflict. He frames NATO expansion as the decisive provocation and then goes further: Ukraine may provide the troops, but the financing, targeting, technology, and command layer belong to the alliance. This is the interview's strongest example of his habit of renaming the board once the visible players stop explaining the scale of the fight. Sources: [8:18 seg-0016](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0016) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=498s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0016`; [8:41 seg-0017](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0017) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=521s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0017`; [9:48 seg-0018](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0018) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=588s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0018` The section then hardens into a regime diagnosis. America, Jiang says, can no longer easily finance global wars from its own base and is now trying to push Europe into paying, drafting, and dying for a conflict it cannot win. That is why he calls the United States a mafia empire: not because it is merely aggressive, but because it treats allies as extortable clients. His forecast that Europe could face major civil unrest if young men are pushed toward conscription extends the same logic forward into domestic blowback. Sources: [10:34 seg-0019](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0019) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=634s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0019`; [11:20 seg-0020](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0020) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=680s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0020`; [12:08 seg-0021](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0021) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=728s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0021` ### Sunk Costs Keep The War Going To Odessa Time: 13:29-20:38 Summary: The second Ukraine block turns battlefield pessimism into a theory of why obviously losing wars can still drag on for years. Jiang's bluntest line in the interview is his claim that Ukraine is finished as a nation. He grounds it in casualties, refugee flight, and the likely permanent loss of the industrial and agricultural east. The language is maximal, but the structure of the argument matters more than the rhetoric: once demographic and territorial losses cross a certain threshold, a country can still exist formally while its strategic future has already been broken. Sources: [13:29 seg-0024](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0024) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=809s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0024`; [14:23 seg-0025](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0025) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=863s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0025` When the host asks why the war would continue if so much of the outcome is already visible, Jiang reaches for a casino image. Europe's problem is sunk cost fallacy. Too much money, prestige, and fantasy wealth have already been invested to permit an easy retreat. That is why he expects a long war of attrition, a slow Russian advance, periodic calls for peace that change nothing, and eventually a final decisive struggle around Odessa. The point is not only military. It is psychological and political: elites often keep losing games alive because admitting the loss would destroy the logic that justified playing. Sources: [16:51 seg-0029](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0029) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1011s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0029`; [17:36 seg-0031](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0031) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1056s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0031`; [18:27 seg-0032](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0032) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1107s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0032`; [19:18 seg-0033](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0033) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1158s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0033`; [20:09 seg-0034](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0034) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1209s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0034` ### Rapprochement Starts Where Bullying Stops Working Time: 20:38-28:20 Summary: The middle interview pivot turns the great-power rivalry frame inside out: China and the United States are portrayed as structurally interdependent, with elite corruption and media theater driving much of the hostility. Janssen sets up the China-U.S. section by invoking DeepSeek, trade war, and rare-earth controls. Jiang answers by saying America has spent the past few years behaving like a bully and that China's response is less expansionist than deterrent: if someone keeps pressing you, eventually you have to hit back hard enough to make negotiation possible. Yet the striking thing is how quickly the answer moves from confrontation to optimism. He says both sides still want peace and prosperity, and he treats personal rapport between Trump and Xi as a real mechanism for de-escalation rather than television garnish. Sources: [20:38 seg-0035](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0035) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1238s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0035`; [21:26 seg-0036](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0036) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1286s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0036`; [21:57 seg-0037](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0037) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1317s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0037`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038` The softer people-to-people section matters because it shows what Jiang thinks the rivalry narrative hides. Chinese families still admire American innovation, still send children to American schools, and still want the relationship repaired. Janssen reinforces that view with stories about ordinary friendliness and the TikTok-ban migration to Chinese apps. Jiang then turns exchange itself into infrastructure. Travel, conversation, and lived familiarity are not sentimental side benefits. They are the basis for any solid geopolitical relationship, because they keep elite theater from becoming the only reality people know. Sources: [24:23 seg-0041](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0041) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1463s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0041`; [25:09 seg-0042](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0042) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1509s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0042`; [25:47 seg-0043](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0043) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1547s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0043`; [26:26 seg-0044](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0044) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1586s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0044` The next answer sharpens the rivalry reversal further. Jiang says the real danger to America is not Chinese supremacy but domestic corruption, inequality, and unresponsive government. Protected by two oceans and rich in resources, America should be extraordinarily hard to threaten from outside. If it feels threatened anyway, that says more about elite dysfunction than about Beijing's inevitable rise. The hostility toward China is therefore read less as strategic necessity than as dialectical distraction for a society that does not want to face its own decay directly. Sources: [26:44 seg-0045](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0045) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1604s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0045`; [27:27 seg-0046](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0046) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1647s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0046`; [28:17 seg-0047](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0047) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1697s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0047` ### Taiwan Reveals The Difference Between A Threat Story And A Real Game Time: 28:20-38:18 Summary: The final major geopolitical sequence argues that China benefits more from the current balance than from war, then ends by widening the frame from nation-state conflict to shared planetary risk. When Janssen raises Taiwan, Jiang answers with unusual bluntness: invading would be idiotic. The reason is not moral innocence but strategic cost. If the United States vanished from East Asia, China would face a stronger Japan, a difficult India, a dangerous Russian frontier, and an even more unstable North Korea. In that framework the American presence is not only a threat. It is also part of the balance that prevents a more chaotic regional game from forming around China. Sources: [28:20 seg-0048](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0048) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1700s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0048`; [29:05 seg-0049](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0049) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1745s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0049`; [29:20 seg-0050](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0050) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1760s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0050`; [30:07 seg-0051](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0051) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1807s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0051`; [30:59 seg-0052](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0052) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1859s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0052`; [31:42 seg-0053](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0053) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1902s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0053` The anti-invasion case then becomes even more concrete. China's industry sits on the coast, its economy depends on global trade, and Taiwan itself can be pressured economically without the catastrophic risks of war. So the standard Western story of a near-certain invasion is, in Jiang's terms, a story that mistakes noise for strategy. If Chinese policymakers are optimizing for peace, prosperity, and internal stability, the high-drama move is exactly the move they should avoid. Sources: [31:42 seg-0053](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0053) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1902s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0053`; [32:31 seg-0054](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0054) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1951s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0054`; [33:14 seg-0055](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0055) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1994s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0055` The closing answer makes the same move on a larger scale. Jiang says the next decade's geopolitical flashpoints are still likely to be Ukraine and the Middle East, but the thing that worries him most is geophysical catastrophe. Whatever one makes of the scientific content, the ethical turn is important. He ends by saying humanity's real enemies are the shared threats that no nation can solve alone. After a long interview about strategy, leverage, and proxy war, the final plea is for a politics capable of treating survival itself as the common game. Sources: [33:55 seg-0056](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0056) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2035s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0056`; [34:24 seg-0057](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0057) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2064s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0057`; [35:24 seg-0058](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0058) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2124s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0058`; [36:09 seg-0059](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0059) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2169s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0059`; [36:38 seg-0060](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0060) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2198s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0060` ## Questions ### How does Jiang use game theory to analyze geopolitics and make predictions? He says geopolitics is a game among players with different strategies, interests, and preferred outcomes. By studying each side's history, internal politics, and desired end state, he thinks apparently confusing behavior becomes predictable. He says geopolitics is a game among players with different strategies, interests, and preferred outcomes. By studying each side's history, internal politics, and desired end state, he thinks apparently confusing behavior becomes predictable. Sources: [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006` Sources: [2:06 seg-0006](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0006) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=126s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0006` ### Can the current Israel-Hamas ceasefire hold, or is more conflict still likely? Jiang says he hopes peace lasts but expects the ceasefire to break because Israeli internal fracture, Netanyahu's incentive structure, and anti-peace militant actors make renewed war more likely than stable settlement. Jiang says he hopes peace lasts but expects the ceasefire to break because Israeli internal fracture, Netanyahu's incentive structure, and anti-peace militant actors make renewed war more likely than stable settlement. Sources: [5:39 seg-0012](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0012) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=339s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0012`; [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013`; [7:25 seg-0014](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0014) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=445s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0014` Sources: [5:39 seg-0012](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0012) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=339s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0012`; [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013`; [7:25 seg-0014](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0014) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=445s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0014` ### Why does Jiang say the Russia-Ukraine war is really a NATO war? He argues that NATO expansion provoked Russia and that the alliance supplies the money, weapons, targeting, and command layer, leaving Ukraine as the battlefield surface of a broader proxy conflict. He argues that NATO expansion provoked Russia and that the alliance supplies the money, weapons, targeting, and command layer, leaving Ukraine as the battlefield surface of a broader proxy conflict. Sources: [8:41 seg-0017](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0017) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=521s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0017`; [9:48 seg-0018](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0018) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=588s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0018`; [15:22 seg-0027](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0027) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=922s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0027`; [16:16 seg-0028](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0028) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=976s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0028` Sources: [8:41 seg-0017](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0017) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=521s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0017`; [9:48 seg-0018](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0018) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=588s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0018`; [15:22 seg-0027](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0027) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=922s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0027`; [16:16 seg-0028](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0028) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=976s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0028` ### How does Jiang read the current China-U.S. relationship after the trade war and rare-earth fight? He says America has acted like a bully, China finally signaled resistance, but both countries still benefit more from peace and exchange than from permanent hostility. He predicts that Trump and Xi can still reset the relationship because elite rapport and people-to-people ties remain strong. He says America has acted like a bully, China finally signaled resistance, but both countries still benefit more from peace and exchange than from permanent hostility. He predicts that Trump and Xi can still reset the relationship because elite rapport and people-to-people ties remain strong. Sources: [21:57 seg-0037](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0037) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1317s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0037`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038`; [24:23 seg-0041](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0041) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1463s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0041`; [26:26 seg-0044](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0044) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1586s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0044` Sources: [21:57 seg-0037](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0037) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1317s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0037`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038`; [24:23 seg-0041](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0041) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1463s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0041`; [26:26 seg-0044](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0044) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1586s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0044` ### Why does Jiang think China is unlikely to invade Taiwan? He says invasion would damage China's real interests by disrupting trade, exposing the coastal industrial base, and removing a regional balancing structure that currently keeps other Asian threats in check. Economic leverage and the status quo serve Beijing better than war. He says invasion would damage China's real interests by disrupting trade, exposing the coastal industrial base, and removing a regional balancing structure that currently keeps other Asian threats in check. Economic leverage and the status quo serve Beijing better than war. Sources: [29:20 seg-0050](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0050) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1760s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0050`; [30:07 seg-0051](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0051) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1807s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0051`; [31:42 seg-0053](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0053) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1902s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0053`; [32:31 seg-0054](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0054) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1951s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0054` Sources: [29:20 seg-0050](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0050) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1760s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0050`; [30:07 seg-0051](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0051) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1807s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0051`; [31:42 seg-0053](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0053) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1902s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0053`; [32:31 seg-0054](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0054) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1951s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0054` ### What future conflict worries Jiang most beyond the usual flashpoints? He says Ukraine and the Middle East remain the main geopolitical flashpoints, but the deeper danger is a major geophysical event that would force humanity to confront common threats rather than nation-state rivalry alone. He says Ukraine and the Middle East remain the main geopolitical flashpoints, but the deeper danger is a major geophysical event that would force humanity to confront common threats rather than nation-state rivalry alone. Sources: [34:24 seg-0057](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0057) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2064s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0057`; [35:24 seg-0058](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0058) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2124s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0058` Sources: [34:24 seg-0057](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0057) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2064s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0057`; [35:24 seg-0058](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0058) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2124s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0058` ## Source Notes - This interview is dated 2025-10-30. Forecasts about a Trump-Xi reset, Europe's Ukraine burden, Taiwan non-invasion, and larger geophysical danger are preserved as Jiang's dated claims from that day rather than rewritten as current reporting. Sources: [0:00 seg-0001](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0001) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=0s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0001`; [12:08 seg-0021](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0021) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=728s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0021`; [20:09 seg-0034](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0034) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1209s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0034`; [26:26 seg-0044](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0044) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1586s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0044`; [32:31 seg-0054](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0054) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1951s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0054`; [35:24 seg-0058](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0058) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=2124s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0058` - The source transcript is usable but has a few visible ASR problems around names and proper nouns, especially Netanyahu, Xi, rapprochement, and one NATO-membership line. This read keeps the stable argumentative shape without pretending those wording-level errors are cleaner than the source supports. Sources: [5:39 seg-0012](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0012) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=339s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0012`; [6:31 seg-0013](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0013) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=391s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0013`; [15:22 seg-0027](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0027) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=922s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0027`; [21:57 seg-0037](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0037) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1317s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0037`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038` - The very first transcript segment is a teaser clip from a later China-U.S. answer rather than the chronological start of the studio conversation. The public read keeps the argument but follows the actual interview movement after the host introduction. Sources: [0:00 seg-0001](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0001) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=0s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0001`; [0:39 seg-0002](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0002) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=39s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0002`; [21:57 seg-0037](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0037) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1317s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0037`; [22:45 seg-0038](https://jianglens.com/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y/transcript/#seg-0038) ([video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRk5VSEzJ4Y&t=1365s)) `video:interview-xrk5vsezj4y@transcript:v1#seg-0038` ## Retrieval Notes This Markdown file is the compressed public reading. It intentionally does not contain the full transcript. For exact wording, timestamps, timed chunks, transcript segment IDs, and source refs, fetch [/data/lens/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.json](https://jianglens.com/data/lens/interviews/interview-xrk5vsezj4y.json).