America's Greatest Strategic Blunder: The Imprisonment of Qian Xuesen
danieltanfh95
92 points
52 comments
May 20, 2026
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Discussion Highlights (9 comments)
Nasrudith
I don't quite get why the author thinks it would be impossible to get a big budget nose-rub in the dirt to the security apparatuses about their incredible abilability to create self-fulfilling prophecies against themselves via bigotry. It isn't like it takes pentagon cooperation for history biopics, the tech is all old.
greesil
I doubt it's the greatest given all that's happened in the past year. But it's certainly up there, no pun intended.
magnio
If you wanna read an article containing essentially the same information without the pesky LLM voice: https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-history/2025/december/m...
zasz
I buy it that this guy is incredibly important in the history of aerospace engineering and the weapons industry, but the article seems like it's making an overly strong claim that the trajectory of American and Chinese tech development was so affected by Qian Xuesen. There are, after all, many other people involved in both trajectories. Would Qian have been so successful in China if the economic and political incentives to listen to him had not been there? Had Qian stayed in America, is there a guarantee that the infrastructure necessary to support his doctrine on technological development would have been available?
xbar
That is a good piece on a truly major technology debacle. The title is overblown.
delichon
Reminds me of the results of a large Slavic country going to war with a much smaller, once subordinate, now independent republic that was the source of their best engineers.
zf00002
I read the whole thing, found this fascinating.
stevenalowe
Or it avoided internal sabotage - no way to know
davidivadavid
Fun book that covers part of that, Machine Decision is Not Final: China and the History and Future of Artificial Intelligence . [0] [0] https://www.urbanomic.com/book/machine-decision-is-not-final...