‘China’s Nostradamus’ who predicted Iran war issues grim warning | US | News

Chinese educator Xueqin Jiang predicted a year ago that Iran would be invaded by the USA under the leadership of Trump (Image: YouTube/PredictiveHistory)
The war between the United States and Iran threatens to escalate into a broader conflict, as Iranian drones and missiles hit targets in the Middle East and a drone reportedly hit an airport in Azerbaijan. American President Donald Trump acknowledged that Iran’s retaliation for the joint US-Israeli attacks that started on February 28 could include attacks on American territory: “We always think about this. We plan for it,” he said. Time magazine. “We expect some things. Like I said, some people will die. When you go to war, some people will die.”
But there may be even more worrying news for Americans. Academician and researcher Xueqin Jiang, described as “China’s Nostradamus”, predicted that the United States was destined to suffer defeat in its war with Iran. Using methods such as game theory and rigorous analysis of historical political patterns to predict future developments, Jiang has already made a number of highly accurate world predictions.

Trump’s reelection was just one of Jiang’s surprisingly accurate predictions (Image: Getty Images)
In a widely circulated video uploaded to him Estimated History In 2024, on his YouTube channel, Jiang stated that Trump would return to the White House after the 2025 elections and would almost inevitably attack Iran shortly after retaking the presidency. However, he made a third prediction at that conference: that Iran would eventually defeat America.
In the 2024 lecture, Jiang told his students: “I am making three big predictions in this class this semester. The first is that Trump will win in November. The second is that the United States will go to war against Iran. The third big prediction is that the United States will lose this war, which will change the global order forever.”
In a new interview detailing his troubling predictions, Jiang suggests that Iranian forces are much better equipped for this conflict than their American counterparts: “Given my analysis of the course of the war, I think Iran has a much greater advantage than the United States. The fact is that there is now a war of attrition between the United States and Iran, and the Iranians have been preparing for this conflict for 20 years,” he said.
Jiang also said, “They did a lot of drill trials. Last June was a 12-day war in which the Iranians were able to study and analyze the offensive capabilities of both the Israelis and the Americans. And they had a lot of time (eight months) to fully prepare for this new attack.”

US rains destruction on Iran but Jiang says Iranians are well prepared (Image: Parspix/ABACA/Shutterstock)
Admiral Sandy Winnefeld, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned that Iranian missile attacks could breach America’s defenses. To talk TimesHe noted that the bulk of Iran’s offensive capability relies on large numbers of relatively cheap Shahed unmanned aerial vehicles, while the Patriot missile batteries that protect US interests in the Middle East are fewer in number and much more costly.
Winnefeld added: “Do we have enough of them competing against Iran’s inventory of Shahed drones and ballistic missiles? Who runs out first? It’s a race against time. There’s also an economic disparity between shooting down a $20,000 Shahed drone with a $4 million missile. You start to run out very quickly, and you’ll probably run out of those Patriots before Iran runs out of Shaheds.”
It was also recently revealed that General Dan Caine, the head of the US military and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had privately warned the president of a critical shortage of defensive missiles just before the first strikes began, informing Trump that this shortcoming in defensive capability could significantly increase the risk to American personnel.
Trump dismissed any notion that the United States might be under-resourced, arguing that American forces have “unlimited mid- to high-end weapons.” He insisted: “The ammunition stocks of the United States have never been higher or better in the middle and upper middle class.”

US Patriot missile system is accurate but expensive (Image: AFP via Getty Images)
But Jiang argues that Iran has been secretly plotting America’s collapse for decades through its connections with paramilitary groups in the Middle East: “Iran, through its proxies the Houthis, Hezbollah, Hamas and Shiite militias, has managed to grasp the American mindset, and now they have a pretty good strategy on how to weaken and eventually destroy the American empire.”
Jiang suggests that defeat would be economic as well as military. He states that Iran’s missile attacks are mainly aimed at the critical infrastructure of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, which consist of Middle Eastern countries aligned with Western interests.
While Iran’s attention is currently on US military bases in the region, there are two broader and more dangerous goals: first, to trigger a major economic recession in the West by threatening shipping through the Strait of Hormuz; The second is to bring the Gulf Cooperation Council countries to their knees by depriving them of fresh water.
“They will eventually go after water treatment plants,” Jiang says. “They are the lifeblood of these nations because they have no freshwater resources. In fact, water desalination plants provide 60% of the Gulf Cooperation Council’s water supply.”

Following the joint US-Israeli attacks on February 28, an explosion occurred throughout the region. (Image: AFP via Getty Images)
Emphasizing that Iranian drones are relatively cheap, around 50 thousand dollars, Iranian noted that only one drone would need to penetrate Saudi Arabia’s missile shield to trigger widespread panic: “If they destroy the desalination plant in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia – this is a city with a population of 10 million. They will run out of water in two weeks.”
By closing the Strait of Hormuz, Iran could also deprive America’s allies in the region because GCC countries import about 90% of their food. “The Iranians are now threatening the existence of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Qatar. The reason this matters is because the Gulf states are truly the cornerstone of the American economy.”
Along with the collapse of the global oil trade, the inevitable financial collapse will also cripple the AI data centers on which America is increasingly dependent: “If the Gulf countries can no longer sell oil and they can no longer finance this AI bubble in the US, then this AI bubble will burst, and with it the entire American economy.”
“This is the dire situation Americans face right now.”

Iranian Shahed drones can be produced in large numbers at relatively low cost (Image: AP)




