Why China Will Eventually Turn on Russia

Russia and China declared a friendship with "no limits" — but history says otherwise. In this video, we break down why the Sino-Russian alliance is less a partnership and more a slow-motion collision: centuries-old territorial grievances, a silent takeover of Central Asia, a looming water crisis pointing straight at Siberia, and a demographic imbalance that makes Russia's position increasingly indefensible. We cover: — Why both countries need each other right now — and why that window is closing — The 1860 treaty that gave Russia Vladivostok and locked China out of the Sea of Japan — The 1969 Sino-Soviet border war that nearly went nuclear — How China is quietly displacing Russia across Central Asia, pipeline by pipeline — Why Lake Baikal — Earth's largest freshwater lake — may be the most strategically important body of water in the 21st century — The "junior partner trap" Russia is walking into — and why Beijing is perfectly happy about it The world's two most powerful authoritarian states aren't building a new world order. They're running out the clock on each other. 🔔 Subscribe for deep-dive geopolitics every week. #Geopolitics #Russia #China #SinoRussian #Putin #XiJinping #Ukraine #Taiwan #ColdWar #WorldOrder #RussiaChina #BeltAndRoad #Siberia #LakeBaikal #CentralAsia #Multipolar #UkraineWar #GlobalPolitics #RealPolitik #InternationalRelations