He argues the Iran war must be understood as a networked conflict where centralizing leadership in one target is ineffective because the adversarial structure is distributed.
Topic brief
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Conflict Structure
He argues the Iran war must be understood as a networked conflict where centralizing leadership in one target is ineffective because the adversarial structure is distributed.
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Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"You want to be taken seriously as somebody to negotiate with? That just tells you don't negotiate, defeat them on the ground. And just..."
"We have millions of people who are signing up to get visas to come to the United States. They don't want to go to..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang reframes Hormuz disruption as a production-system collapse and argues that escalation incentives make the Iran conflict a political-economic choke point beyond price shocks.
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