This paper presents a structural framework for understanding major 20th and 21st-century conflicts not as outcomes of ideological confrontation or singular trigger events, but as pressure-release mechanisms within systems approaching fiscal termination points. Through analysis of five historical case studies spanning the 1907 Panic to the 2008 financial crisis, we demonstrate that war functions as the sole politically viable pathway for sovereign debt restructuring when conventional monetary tools reach exhaustion. We propose viewing war through a thermodynamic lens: accumulated sovereign debt represents potential energy within closed economic systems, and warfare constitutes the kinetic release event that resets fiscal capacity. This framework challenges dominant historical narratives by relocating war causation from the battlefield to the balance sheet. However, the release of fiscal pressure through warfare does not resolve sovereign indebtedness; it merely transitions states into a new phase of financial subordination. In the aftermath of conflict, weakened nations frequently enter debt-colonization cycles, wherein nominal sovereignty is preserved but economic autonomy is ceded to external creditors. Historical patterns from post-imperial customs seizures to IMF structural adjustment, post-war reconstruction regimes, and modern bond-market governance demonstrate that states emerging from war often become more indebted, not less, as strategic assets, monetary policy space, and taxation rights shift under creditor control. This paper therefore situates war not as an endpoint of fiscal breakdown, but as the opening act of a longer economic annexation process: the transformation of defeated or destabilized nations into debt-dependent jurisdictions within global financial hierarchies.
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Essentia Vera
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Essentia Vera (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6974606dbb9d90c67120a3f7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18338578