Jiang uses the term to explain Russia's methodical war tempo: heavy firepower, slower advance, and emphasis on wearing the opponent down while controlling destruction.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
artillery warfare
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...themselves defending against the Russian attack. The Russians have perfected drone artillery warfare in the trenches of Ukraine. And that's a perfect combination if..."
Showing 22 evidence items
No matching evidence on this topic page.
Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...themselves defending against the Russian attack. The Russians have perfected drone artillery warfare in the trenches of Ukraine. And that's a perfect combination if..."
Key Notes
Jiang argues that Russia's slow pace in Ukraine reflects specialization in artillery warfare and a deliberate effort to limit civilian casualties and preserve critical infrastructure.
Jiang argues Tomahawk missiles are an escalation, but Russia's nuclear deterrent means NATO's real remaining option is to send more European troops to die while Russia slowly advances through artillery warfare.
Timestamped Evidence
"...Russia is slow but it's slow because they um specialize in artillery warfare and also Russia wants to minimize um civilian casualties as well..."
"...reason why is that, um, what Russians do really well is artillery warfare. And the situation is set up that Russia can slowly, slowly..."
"...themselves defending against the Russian attack. The Russians have perfected drone artillery warfare in the trenches of Ukraine. And that's a perfect combination if..."
"...armies in the world because they've had four years of this warfare. They've learned a lot in drone warfare, in trans warfare and artillery..."
"...drone reconnaissance flying around. You've got very motivated infantry. You've got artillery warfare. You've controlled the terrain. So, if, you know, a million soldiers..."
"...a year um you know Russia has basically perfected this attrition Warfare which involves um drone reconnaissance um infantry uh uh probing attacks and..."
"attrition uh russia uses trans -artillery warfare and it's a master of that and it and so this warfare it's really slow it's methodical..."
"...war, they fight it really slowly because the Russians use trench artillery warfare, so you have to move these artillery pieces into place. But..."
"...Odessa will be the final battle. But unfortunately, because Russia uses artillery warfare, because NATO is very stubborn, this thing will last for a..."
"...like, the Russians are very methodical. They're very slow. They use artillery warfare. So they're very slow. Because these are trying to limit casualties...."
"...did that it played to Russia's ultimate strength which is defensive artillery warfare it's the best in the world at that and because the..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Glenn Diesen asks Jiang the practical questions first: what is this war for, who is exhausting whom, where is the weak point, and why would Washington choose such a disaster?
Jiang's through-line is that a declining empire does not retreat cleanly.
Jiang's through-line is that American decline will not end in a peaceful handoff to China or Russia.
Mercouris opens by asking for predictive geopolitics rather than another issue-by-issue panel, and Jiang answers by folding Ukraine, Europe, Iran, China, and domestic American disorder into one machine.
Stephen Akela invites Jiang on to explain how he predicted war with Iran, but the interview keeps widening until prediction becomes a whole model of late empire: a debt system that cannot tolerate peace,...
The interview opens with Jiang's method and then keeps testing it across one pressure system.
Jiang treats the next Israel-Iran war not as another regional flare-up but as the real conflict the earlier 12-day war only rehearsed.
Danny from CapitalCosm asks the obvious question: where does the world go from here?
Related Topics
How To Use And Cite This Page
This topic page is a discovery surface. For generated synthesis, cite the human-readable source reading or lens page. For Jiang-spoken claims, cite the transcript segment, source ref, and YouTube timestamp. Raw text and Markdown mirrors are fallback surfaces for tools that cannot read this HTML page.