18 March 2026

Who will Win the US-Iran War 2026 – Let Generative AI tell you with Sun Zi’s Analysis

 Who will Win the US-Iran War 2026 – Let Generative AI tell you with Sun Zi’s Analysis

By now, you would have read many analysis and commentaries about the US-Iran War. The most famous one is Prof Jiang’s Predictive History. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIS2eB-rGv0

But we can also use Sun Zi’s Art of War to tell us as well. Here are some output from Gen-AI. The best one I found is DeepSeek. So I present it first.

Prompt “give me an analysis of applying sun zi art of war to US-IRAN war 2026 in the following format: sun zi's principle, US, IRAN, Prediction of Outcome”



DeepSeek

Here is an analysis of the fictional US-Iran war in 2026, applying selected principles from Sun Tzu's The Art of War.

This analysis is based on a hypothetical scenario where the US and Israel launched joint attacks starting February 28, 2026, which included the assassination of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei . The conflict has since escalated into a regional war of attrition .

Sun Tzu's Principle

United States (US)

Iran

Prediction of Outcome

"Every battle is won before it is ever fought" (Laying Plans)

FLAWED CALCULATION: The US/Israel planned for a rapid decapitation strike, assuming it would trigger regime dissonance or a popular uprising and force Tehran to negotiate . They failed to anticipate Iran's resilience and prepared strategy .

SUPERIOR PREPARATION: Iran had a preconceived strategy ready. The late Supreme Leader left a succession plan, and the "Mosaic Defense" doctrine was activated, restructuring the IRGC into autonomous units capable of operating independently .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Sun Tzu's assessment heavily favors Iran. While the US made "few calculations" based on a hoped-for collapse, Iran made "many calculations," preparing for the exact scenario that unfolded, ensuring its command structure's survival .

"There is no instance of a country having benefited from prolonged warfare" (Waging War)

HIGH COST OF ATTRITION: The US is fighting an expensive air war, using $4 million Patriot interceptors to counter Iran's $50,000 drones . This economic imbalance, along with the global economic disruption from a closed Strait of Hormuz, makes a protracted conflict unsustainable for the US-led coalition .

STRATEGY OF PROTRACTION: Iran is intentionally waging a prolonged war of attrition. By using low-cost drones and missiles to overwhelm defenses and disrupt global oil supplies, they aim to exhaust the US's economic and political will to continue .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Iran is forcing the US into the type of "long war" Sun Tzu warned against. The US is already feeling the strain of "dulled weapons" and "exhausted strength" as its advanced but limited missile defenses are drained .

"Supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting" (Attack by Stratagem)


MILITARY-DOMINANT APPROACH: The US is prosecuting the war almost exclusively with the military instrument of power, while Iran fights across all diplomatic, informational, military, economic, and legal (DIMEL) domains . There is no coherent diplomatic strategy to end the conflict .

MULTI-DOMAIN STRATEGY: Iran is effectively using all instruments of power. This includes diplomatic outreach to Russia and Pakistan, information operations leveraging US-caused civilian casualties, and economic warfare through the closure of the Strait of Hormuz .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Iran is winning the "battle of plans" by attacking the US's cohesion and global standing without relying solely on military means. The US, by fighting only one form of war, is "shattering and destroying" without achieving its political objectives .

"All warfare is based on deception" (Laying Plans)

TRANSPARENT INTENTIONS: The US has failed to deceive Iran about its aims. Its stated objectives have shifted repeatedly, causing confusion among allies and providing no strategic ambiguity . Its main deception effort, a denial of responsibility for the Minab school strike, was immediately and comprehensively refuted .

SUCCESSFUL DECEPTION: Iran deceived the US about its willingness and capacity to retaliate. The US/Israel wrongly concluded Iran would be unable to respond forcefully, a miscalculation that led them into a wider war . Iran is now using the threat of "continuous strikes" to create maximum uncertainty .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. By feigning weakness, Iran lured its enemies into a position where they are now overextended. The US, with its contradictory statements and failed denial, has lost the information war and the element of surprise .

"The Moral Law causes the people to be in complete accord with their ruler" (Laying Plans)

WEAKENED DOMESTIC & ALLIED SUPPORT: The US public is pessimistic about the war's duration . Crucially, no allied nation has joined the coalition, and regional allies are "angered and alarmed" by the conflict, fearing retaliation . The "Moral Law" is absent.

ENTRENCHED REGIME COHESION: Contrary to US expectations, the attacks have not created "cracks or defections" in Iran's power structure. The regime has become "more hardline" and "entrenched," with the population (lacking free information) potentially rallying around the leadership against an external aggressor .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Iran's leadership is more unified, while the US is diplomatically isolated. The "Moral Law," or the harmony between ruler and people, is clearly in Iran's favor, as its power structure has survived and even been emboldened by the attack .

"Avoid what is strong, attack what is weak" (Weak Points & Strong)

ATTACKING THE STRONGHOLD: The US has focused its military might on what was strong—Iran's nuclear facilities, navy, and fixed air-defense systems—which, while valuable, represented a small fraction of Iran's overall warfare capability .

EXPLOITING US WEAKNESSES: Iran is attacking the US's weak points: its low tolerance for casualties, its reliance on expensive technology, the political divisions in its coalition, and its sensitivity to global economic pressure .

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Iran has successfully shifted the battlefield to areas where the US is vulnerable (economics, information, attrition), neutralizing the US's conventional military superiority and turning it into a liability .

"The general who wins a battle makes many calculations in his temple" (Laying Plans)

CALCULATION GAP: The US has been unable to articulate a coherent definition of victory or an end-state for the war. Its strategy is reactive, relying on military force to create a political outcome it cannot define . As one official stated, "I don't know" how the war ends .

CLEAR STRATEGIC AIM: Iran's sole calculation is regime survival . Every action, from closing the Strait of Hormuz to escalating attacks on Gulf states, is calculated to achieve that single, clear objective . They know exactly what "victory" means for them.

IRAN ADVANTAGE. Iran is fighting a war of necessity with a clear goal. The US is fighting a war of choice with shifting, unclear objectives. Sun Tzu would predict defeat for the side with "few calculations" against the one with "many" .

Final Verdict

The analysis of the 2026 US-Iran war through the lens of Sun Tzu presents a unanimous verdict across multiple principles: Iran holds the strategic advantage. While the United States and Israel have won significant tactical victories in the air, they have failed to translate these into a sustainable political outcome. Iran's superior preparation, multi-domain strategy, and clear-eyed focus on regime survival have allowed it to trap the US in a costly war of attrition it is not prepared to fight. By every metric Sun Tzu lays out for forecasting victory or defeat—preparation, unity, knowledge of the enemy, and clarity of purpose—Iran is currently outmaneuvering its more powerful adversary.

 

Sun Zi also gave us the 5 winning factors and 6 losing factors and 3 blunders. So I asked DeepSeek to analyse based on such factors (It also show my understanding of Sun Zi will help cover the missing pieces in DeepSeek.

Consolidated Analysis: U.S. vs. Iran (2026)

A Sun Tzu Framework: Five Wins, Six Losses, Three Blunders


Executive Summary

Applying the complete Sun Tzu framework—Five Wins (预见胜利的五条原则), Six Losses (六种导致失败的情况), and Three Blunders (三蠢/领导者干预的三种愚蠢)—to the 2026 U.S.-Iran conflict reveals a clear verdict:

Iran is winning the strategic battle, while the United States is losing despite its tactical superiority.

The U.S. possesses overwhelming military power but has violated nearly every principle of victory, committed multiple "losses," and made all "three blunders" of leadership. Iran, conversely, has executed a near-textbook strategy of "first make yourself invincible" (先为不可胜).


Part I: The Five Wins (五胜) — Who Meets the Conditions?

Principle

U.S. Performance

Iran Performance

Advantage

1. Know when to fight
(知可以战与不可以战者胜)

Failed. Launched war based on emotion ("vengeance"), not strategy. Missed the window for quick victory.

Passed. Chose the battlefield (asymmetric, attritional) and timing that favors them.

🇮🇷 Iran

2. Know how to use forces
(识众寡之用者胜)

Failed. Using expensive missiles ($1M+) to shoot down cheap drones ($2K). Fighting a "rich man's war" against a "poor man's strategy."

Passed. Masterful asymmetric warfare: drones, proxies, economic warfare (Strait of Hormuz).

🇮🇷 Iran

3. United ranks
(上下同欲者胜)

Failed. Domestic division: 60% oppose war, political infighting. "Coalition of one" internationally.

Passed. Assassination unified the population. National solidarity hardened.

🇮🇷 Iran

4. Prepare vs. unprepared
(以虞待不虞者胜)

Failed. Assumed quick victory. No Plan B for protracted war. Caught off guard by Iran's resilience.

Passed. Pre-planned "dispersed command" (31 war zones). Stockpiled drones/missiles. Ready for this.

🇮🇷 Iran

5. Capable general, no interference
(将能而君不御者胜)

Failed. Political leaders overriding military advisors. Constant shifts in objectives.

Passed. Unified command. Clear objective: survive and inflict cost.

🇮🇷 Iran

Five Wins Score: U.S. 0 — Iran 5


Part II: The Six Losses (六败) — Who Is Falling?

Loss Type

Description

U.S. Performance

Iran Performance

(Flight)

Equal strength but attacking with ratio imbalance

Not applicable

Not applicable

(Laxity)

Strong soldiers, weak officers

Not evident

Not evident

(Collapse)

Strong officers, weak soldiers

Not evident

Not evident

(Rout)

Generals angry, disobey, commander ignores

Evidence of inter-agency friction? Unclear

Unclear

(Turmoil)

General weak, undisciplined, chaotic formations

YES. Strategic confusion. No clear end-state. Shifting goals. "Confused force" (乱军).

No

(Defeat)

Cannot assess enemy, weak vs. strong, no elite core

YES. Misjudged Iran's will. Cannot translate tactical wins into strategic victory.

No

Six Losses Verdict: The U.S. is suffering from Turmoil () and Defeat ().


Part III: The Three Blunders (三蠢) — Leadership Failure

Blunder

Description

U.S. Performance

Verdict

1. 不知却下令劝退
Fettering the army

Ordering advance/retreat without knowing situation

Launched without clear plan. Objectives shift constantly. Fighting as a "restricted force" (縻军).

Committed

2. 参军政
Confusing the army

Meddling in administration without knowing internal affairs

Political leadership overriding military reality. Ignoring advisors. Fighting with military only while Iran uses all instruments of power.

Committed

3. 参军任
Creating doubt

Appointing wrong people/tools without knowing structure

Assigning military to solve political/civilizational problem. Wrong tool for the job.

Committed

Three Blunders Score: U.S. 3/3 — Iran 0/3

The consequence, as Sun Tzu warns: "三军既惑且疑,则诸侯之难至矣,是谓乱军引胜" — When the army is confused and doubtful, disaster arrives. This is called throwing your own force into confusion and leading the enemy to victory.


Part IV: The Core Principle — "First Make Yourself Invincible"

(先为不可胜,以待敌之可胜)

Dimension

U.S.

Iran

不可胜在己
(Invincibility depends on self)

Failed. Did not secure domestic unity, did not prepare for protracted war, did not secure allies.

Passed. Secured internal unity, dispersed command, stockpiled weapons, prepared for attrition.

可胜在敌
(Victory depends on enemy's error)

Waiting for Iran to collapse. But Iran shows no sign. U.S. is the one exposing vulnerabilities.

Waiting for U.S. to tire. Economic pressure ($100+ oil), political pressure on White House, media narrative shifting.

守则不足,攻则有余
(Defend when insufficient, attack when abundant)

Attacked when "insufficient" (no strategy, no alliance, no exit).

Defended while "insufficient," now exploiting U.S. overreach.

Core Principle Verdict: Iran has achieved "先为不可胜." The U.S. has exposed "可胜" opportunities daily.


Part V: Final Prediction — Who Would Win?

If "Win" Means:

Definition

Verdict

Reasoning

Quick Victory / Regime Change

🇺🇸 U.S. cannot win

Missed the window. Iran's regime intact. War has entered attrition phase.

Decisive Military Defeat of Iran

🇺🇸 U.S. cannot win

Iran's forces are dispersed. There is no single "center of gravity" to strike.

Preserving Self & Achieving Aims
(自保而全胜)

🇮🇷 Iran is winning

Survived the initial shock. Inflicting economic pain. Exposing U.S. isolation. Out-waiting the superpower.

Not Losing

🇮🇷 Iran winning

In a war of attrition between a superpower and a regional power, "not losing" is winning for the weaker side.


The Sun Tzu Final Verdict

"昔之善战者,先为不可胜,以待敌之可胜。"
(The skillful warriors of old first made themselves invincible, and then waited for the enemy's moment of vulnerability.)

Iran has played the role of the "skillful warrior." It prepared, unified, and positioned itself to be invincible. It is now waiting for the U.S. to tire.

The United States has played the role of the "defeated army" (败兵). It fought first and then sought victory (先战而后求胜). It committed all Three Blunders, failed all Five Wins, and now suffers from Turmoil () and Defeat ().

"主不可以怒而兴师,将不可以愠而致战"
(A sovereign cannot raise an army out of anger, nor can a general fight a war out of resentment.)

The 2026 U.S.-Iran war began in anger. By every principle of The Art of War, it is destined to end in frustration for the side that forgot Sun Tzu's teachings.

Strategic Winner: Iran
Tactical Victor: U.S. (but tactical victories do not equal strategic wins)


Analysis based on Sun Tzu's "The Art of War": Five Wins (谋攻篇), Six Losses (地形篇), Three Blunders (谋攻篇), and the core doctrine of "First Make Yourself Invincible" (形篇).



 ===================

Claude AI

Sun Tzu's "Art of War" Applied to Potential US-Iran Conflict

Important Disclaimer: This analysis is based on strategic principles, not moral endorsement. It examines likely outcomes through Sun Tzu's framework while recognizing that preventing war is preferable to analyzing it.


Analysis Table

Sun Tzu's Principle

United States

Iran

Predicted Outcome

"Know yourself and know your enemy" (知己知彼,百战不殆)

Weakness: May not fully understand Iranian culture, resilience, or defensive preparations. Operating on stereotypes rather than deep knowledge.

Strength: Has studied US military doctrine for decades. Understands American political vulnerabilities and war fatigue.

Advantage: Iran. Iran has prepared specifically for this confrontation; US applying generic strategies from previous conflicts.

"Win without fighting" (不战而屈人之兵)

Failure: Abandoned diplomacy (withdrew from JCPOA in 2018). Chose military pressure over sustained negotiation.

Partial success: Used diplomacy to divide international community, gain sympathy. Presented as victim of aggression.

Advantage: Iran. By drawing US into actual combat, Iran forces US away from its supreme strategic advantage—avoiding war entirely.

"Victorious warriors win first, then go to war" (胜兵先胜而后求战)

Weakness: Going to war hoping to figure out victory conditions later. Unclear endgame. What does "winning" even mean?

Strength: Clear objective: Survive, inflict cost, exhaust American will, expel US influence from region. Victory conditions defined.

Advantage: Iran. Iran has already "won" by having clear, achievable objectives. US lacks strategic clarity.

"All warfare is based on deception" (兵者,诡道也)

Mixed: Superior intelligence capabilities but vulnerable to information warfare. Domestic propaganda creates false confidence.

Strength: Decades of asymmetric deception. Concealed facilities, mobile launchers, proxy networks. False targets.

Advantage: Iran. Asymmetric actors excel at deception against conventional powers. US intelligence will be incomplete.

"Attack where unprepared, appear where unexpected" (攻其无备,出其不意)

Strength: Technological superiority allows surprise strikes. Stealth capabilities. Precision weapons.

Strength: Swarm tactics, proxy forces, asymmetric attacks on unexpected targets (Gulf infrastructure, shipping, cyber).

Mixed. Both can achieve surprise, but Iran's asymmetric approach may be more disruptive to regional stability.

"Prolonged warfare benefits no one" (兵久而国利者,未之有也)

Weakness: US has low tolerance for prolonged conflict. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan prove this. Political will evaporates.

Strength: Society prepared for long struggle. "Will to suffer" is higher. Authoritarian system can sustain losses longer.

Advantage: Iran. If conflict becomes protracted (likely given geography), US political support will collapse first.

"When you surround an army, leave an outlet free" (围师必阙)

Failure: Maximum pressure campaign left Iran no face-saving exit. Attacking during peace talks removes diplomatic outlet.

Position: Cornered with no acceptable escape. This makes them more dangerous, not less. Desperate enemies fight hardest.

Disadvantage: Both. Cornered enemies are unpredictable and willing to accept massive costs. Escalation risk increases.

"Supreme excellence consists of breaking enemy's resistance without fighting" (不战而屈人之兵为上)

Failure: Chose military force over sustained diplomatic/economic pressure that might have worked over time.

Success: By surviving and imposing costs, breaks US will to continue. Doesn't need military victory, just endurance.

Advantage: Iran. Iran's strategy aligns better with this principle—endure, impose cost, wait for US political will to break.

"The general who advances without coveting fame and retreats without fearing disgrace" (进不求名,退不避罪)

Weakness: Domestic politics drives decisions. Leaders can't "back down" without political cost. Ego prevents wise retreat.

Strength: Regime cares more about survival than international prestige. Willing to appear weak temporarily to win strategically.

Advantage: Iran. Can be pragmatic without losing face. US leaders trapped by domestic political pressures.

"In war, numbers alone confer no advantage" (兵非贵益多也)

Overconfidence: Massive military superiority but wrong type for this conflict. Like bringing a sword to a guerrilla war.

Reality: Smaller force but appropriate tools—drones, missiles, irregular tactics suited to the terrain and objectives.

Advantage: Iran. Quality and appropriateness of force matters more than quantity. Iran has "right-sized" capabilities.

"The skillful fighter puts himself into a position which makes defeat impossible" (善战者,立于不败之地)

Vulnerability: Extended supply lines, regional bases vulnerable to attack, domestic political fragility.

Strength: Fighting on home terrain, prepared defenses, dispersed assets, lower bar for "victory" (survival = win).

Advantage: Iran. Defensive posture on home ground with limited objectives is easier to maintain than offensive operations requiring total victory.

"Make use of the enemy's resources" (因粮于敌)

Limited: Cannot realistically use Iranian resources. Must supply everything from outside.

Advantage: Can use oil markets, global economy, proxy networks. Disrupting Gulf disrupts US economy indirectly.

Advantage: Iran. Economic warfare uses global system against US interests (oil prices, investment flows, dollar stability).

"Speed is the essence of war" (兵贵神速)

Initial advantage: Can strike quickly with precision. Opening salvos effective.

Long-term advantage: Can sustain operations indefinitely. Speed matters less than endurance in protracted conflict.

Initial: US. Long-term: Iran. US wins tactical battles quickly, loses strategic war slowly.

"All men can see the tactics, but what none can see is the strategy" (人皆知我所以胜之形,而莫知吾所以制胜之形)

Weakness: Strategy is visible—overthrow regime, neutralize nuclear program. Predictable.

Strength: Real strategy hidden—survive, exhaust US, reshape region after American withdrawal. Appears tactical but deeply strategic.

Advantage: Iran. US telegraphs intentions; Iran's true strategic goals less visible until they're achieved.

"Do not repeat the tactics which have gained you one victory" (战胜不复)

Failure: Applying same playbook from Iraq 2003. Shock and awe, regime decapitation, occupation. Didn't work then, won't work now.

Success: Learning from Iraq, Syria, Yemen conflicts. Adapted tactics continuously. Studied US methods and developed counters.

Advantage: Iran. Iran learned from watching US operations for 20 years. US repeating past mistakes.


Overall Strategic Assessment

Short-Term (Months 1-6):

US Advantage: Tactical victories, air superiority, precision strikes effective, regime leadership targeted

Medium-Term (Years 1-3):

Stalemate: US controls air, Iran controls ground. Asymmetric attacks continue. Regional instability spreads. Economic costs mount.

Long-Term (Years 3+):

Iranian Strategic Victory: Not through military defeat of US, but through:

  • Exhausting American political will
  • Imposing unsustainable economic costs
  • Surviving as a regime (which equals victory by their definition)
  • Forcing eventual US withdrawal
  • Reshaping regional order after American departure

Sun Tzu's Overall Verdict

"There is no instance of a country having benefited from prolonged warfare." (兵久而国利者,未之有也)

What Sun Tzu Would Predict:

US wins battles, loses war - Superior firepower achieves tactical victories without strategic success

Iran survives = Iran wins - By enduring, Iran achieves its core objective

Economic catastrophe - Both sides damaged, but Iran's lower baseline makes costs more sustainable

Regional chaos benefits rivals - China and Russia gain while US bleeds resources

No clear "victory" possible - What does success look like? Regime change? Nuclear elimination? Both unlikely.

Historical pattern repeats - Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq all followed this trajectory

The Sicilian Expedition Parallel:

Like Athens invading Sicily (415 BC):

  • Overconfident superior power
  • Distant theater with difficult logistics
  • Underestimated enemy resilience
  • Unclear victory conditions
  • Result: Catastrophic defeat leading to imperial decline

Sun Tzu's Advice (If He Could Counsel Both Sides)

To the United States:

"The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting. You have already lost by choosing war. Your best move now is dignified withdrawal through renewed diplomacy. Build the enemy a golden bridge to retreat across—and use it yourself."

To Iran:

"When strong, avoid battle. When weak, be crafty. You cannot defeat America militarily, but you can make victory impossible for them. Survive, impose costs, wait. Time is your ally."


Critical Caveats

This analysis assumes:

  1. Geography and terrain favor Iran (mountainous, large, dispersed)
  2. US political system has low tolerance for prolonged conflict
  3. Iran has prepared defensive strategy for 20+ years
  4. Economic interconnections make war costly for all parties
  5. No nuclear weapons are used (changes everything)

This analysis does NOT:

  • Endorse war
  • Celebrate predicted outcomes
  • Ignore human suffering
  • Make this conflict inevitable or desirable

Biblical Response to This Analysis

Even if Sun Tzu's predictions are accurate, Christians should:

Work to prevent the war - Predicted disaster strengthens case for peace

Pray for wisdom - For leaders to avoid this path

Mourn the trajectory - Strategic analysis doesn't reduce human cost

Advocate for diplomacy - Build the "golden bridge" Sun Tzu describes

Prepare to help victims - On all sides

Remember: Sun Tzu describes what will likely happen. The Bible prescribes what should happen. Both point toward the same conclusion: Avoid this war.

 

27 February 2026

Learn How to Answer Nasty Accusations From A 18 year-old Champion

With Eileng Gu winning 1 gold and 2 silvers in the recent 2026 Winter Olympics, there are more attacks on her. But such were not new to her. When she at 18 years-old, representing China, and winning 2 golds and 1 silver at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, such things were happening already. Let learn from her - how she converted the 'attacker' to be 'friend'...


I get ChatGPT for more comments.

🟨 Converting Attackers to Friends — Learning from Gu Ailing

Additional Comments by Lim Liat


🟥 Reporter Question #1

The reporter asked Gu Ailing, are you Chinese or American?

🟩 Gu Ailing’s Response

My father is American, my mother is Chinese from Beijing, and my grandmother still lives in Beijing. Since I was a child, I have lived 30% of the time in China and 70% of the time in the United States every year. I can speak fluent Chinese and English, and I have a deep understanding of the cultures of China and the United States. I like to eat Chinese food made by my grandma the most, and I like to eat Peking duck the most. When I talk about Peking duck, I am immediately hungry! As you can imagine, when I was in China, I was a true Chinese, and when I was in America, I was a true American.

Key Insight:

  • Opt 1: Both.
  • Opt 2: Neither.
  • Go a dimension higher (e.g., Singapore: “We are neither pro-China nor pro-US, we are pro-righteousness.”)

Result: The reporter was speechless!


🟥 Reporter Question #2

Another reporter asked again, you were trained in the United States, and the United States used so many resources to cultivate you. Now you represent China and won the prize. Have you betrayed the United States that cultivated you?

🟩 Gu’s Response

When I was training in the United States, the coach was hired by my mother, and the training ground was rented by my mother. I only owe my mother one, let alone betrayed any country!

Key Insight:

  • Find the root source of contribution.
  • We paid for them.

Result: The reporter was speechless to ask further questions.


🟥 Reporter Question #3

Another reporter asked again, did you know that in the United States now, many people don’t like you?

🟩 Gu’s Response

I am just an 18-year-old girl, trying to do what I love the most. I have never thought about winning the love of people all over the world in the past, and I have never thought about whether anyone doesn’t like me. I don’t even want to spend my time and energy paying attention to people who have no education and don’t like me because most of them won’t be Olympic medalists.

Key Insight:

  • Be what you want to be, not what others demand of you.
  • Discover your mission, vision, values.

Result: Quan Nan laughed, and the reporter who asked the question was embarrassed!


🟪 Closing Comment

The reporter of the British Guardian has a bit of conscience. In the last paragraph of his interview report, he said that Gu Ailing is really a pure and lovely girl. We should only appreciate her wonderful performance during the competition and stop adding the worldly political struggle to the world on this eighteen-year-old girl.

Final Takeaway:

  • Resist the pressures on you to conform to them.
  • Be your own identity.


🧭 The “Gu Method” Framework

A playbook for mastering high-pressure, identity-loaded questions


1. The Logical Pivot — Reject the False Binary

When used: You’re forced into an either/or identity trap.
Core move: Rise above the frame; expand the context.

What it does:

  • Breaks the interviewer’s control
  • Reframes identity as multidimensional
  • Signals calm intellectual confidence

Signature tactic:

  • Acknowledge complexity
  • Provide factual grounding
  • Refuse emotional bait

Result: The question collapses because the premise was too narrow.


2. The Source Clarification — Follow the Contribution

When used: You’re accused of disloyalty or ingratitude.
Core move: Trace who actually invested or contributed.

What it does:

  • Replaces narrative with verifiable facts
  • Neutralizes moral framing
  • Shifts from politics → personal agency

Signature tactic:

  • Specify who paid, trained, supported
  • Use concrete details
  • Keep tone matter-of-fact

Result: The emotional accusation loses credibility.


3. The Mission Shield — Refuse the Popularity Trap

When used: Critics appeal to public opinion or approval.
Core move: Anchor to purpose, not to applause.

What it does:

  • Demonstrates inner locus of control
  • Avoids defensive posture
  • Signals long-term focus

Signature tactic:

  • Recenter on personal mission
  • Decline to chase universal approval
  • Preserve dignity without attacking

Result: Critics appear petty; you appear focused.


4. The Emotional Tone — Sharp Mind, Gentle Delivery

Always present. This is the multiplier.

Key characteristics:

  • Calm, not combative
  • Light touch of humor when appropriate
  • Precise, not verbose
  • Firm without hostility

Why it works:

  • Disarms rather than escalates
  • Keeps audience sympathy
  • Makes opponents look overly aggressive

5. The Meta Principle — Go One Dimension Higher

Unifying insight: Don’t fight inside the trap — change the level of the game.

Operational rule:

When pressured, elevate from emotion → facts → principles → mission

Decision ladder:

  • If framed emotionally → respond factually
  • If framed politically → respond personally
  • If framed socially → respond missionally
  • If framed narrowly → expand the frame

🧠 The Gu Method in One Line

“Stay calm, elevate the frame, anchor in facts, and speak from mission.”