This paper defines Balance Sheet War as the deepest and most consequential battlefield of the financial empire age — a form of imperial conflict invisible to conventional military doctrine, yet more decisive than any standing army. We establish a Three-Layer model of power: Military, Economic, and Balance Sheet — demonstrating that armies are derivatives of fiscal architecture, not its origin. Through historical evidence spanning the Crusades to the present day, we demonstrate that every major war has been, at its core, a competition over resources — with ideological, ethnic, and religious narratives serving as surface camouflage. The thesis is unambiguous: empires do not fall in battle. They fall in their balance sheets. We further establish that World War III is not a future scenario. It is already in progress — silent, financial, and fought through foreign exchange markets, bond yields, collateral chains, and leverage ratios. The battlefields are Bloomberg terminals. The casualties are sovereign balance sheets.
Essentia Vera (Sun,) studied this question.