It is called (Большая-малая война)—literally, the "Big-Little War."
The Bolshaya-Malaya Voyna: Why the Next Global Conflict Won’t Look Like Anything We Expect
Think of Russia’s "special military operation" not as a single event, but as a template. While tanks grind through trenches in Donbas (the "Little" war of attrition), an entirely separate battle is raging for undersea cables in the Atlantic, for rare earth minerals in the Congo, and for AI training data in Silicon Valley (the "Big" war for systemic control).
Nations no longer declare war. Instead, they deploy "police actions," "specialized military operations," or "kinetic assistance." A drone hits a refinery in Siberia. A sabotage team blows a rail link in Poland. The attacking nation denies involvement. The defending nation cannot retaliate with nukes over a single explosion. So, the violence escalates in a gray zone where the truth is the first casualty.
There is a phrase creeping back into the classified memos of Washington, Beijing, and Moscow. You won’t see it on the evening news, but you can feel its shadow over every ceasefire negotiation and every cyber skirmish.
Welcome to the Bolshaya-Malaya. It’s big. It’s little. And it’s already here. What are your thoughts? Have you noticed the blurring lines between peace and war in the last five years? Let me know in the comments.
It is called (Большая-малая война)—literally, the "Big-Little War."
The Bolshaya-Malaya Voyna: Why the Next Global Conflict Won’t Look Like Anything We Expect
Think of Russia’s "special military operation" not as a single event, but as a template. While tanks grind through trenches in Donbas (the "Little" war of attrition), an entirely separate battle is raging for undersea cables in the Atlantic, for rare earth minerals in the Congo, and for AI training data in Silicon Valley (the "Big" war for systemic control).
Nations no longer declare war. Instead, they deploy "police actions," "specialized military operations," or "kinetic assistance." A drone hits a refinery in Siberia. A sabotage team blows a rail link in Poland. The attacking nation denies involvement. The defending nation cannot retaliate with nukes over a single explosion. So, the violence escalates in a gray zone where the truth is the first casualty.
There is a phrase creeping back into the classified memos of Washington, Beijing, and Moscow. You won’t see it on the evening news, but you can feel its shadow over every ceasefire negotiation and every cyber skirmish.
Welcome to the Bolshaya-Malaya. It’s big. It’s little. And it’s already here. What are your thoughts? Have you noticed the blurring lines between peace and war in the last five years? Let me know in the comments.