War is not an exception to politics?it is its essence, stripped of illusion.
In The Logic of War: Laws of Necessity, Chkuaseli presents a bold and uncompromising theory of conflict for the twenty-first century. Drawing on the timeless insights of Thucydides, Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Clausewitz, he restates classical realism for a new era. At the heart of this work lies the doctrine of the Laws of Necessity: fear, survival, and compulsion. These principles explain why diplomacy collapses, why peace is fleeting, and why nations fight even against impossible odds.
Through the lens of the Ukraine?Russia war, Chkuaseli demonstrates how geography, history, and identity converge to make conflict inevitable. From this case, he extracts universal lessons?on balance and collapse, the weakness of morality before power, the logic of alliances, and the endurance of necessity.
This is not a chronicle of battles, but a theory of war itself:
- War as the essence of politics
- Peace as illusion, imposed by strength
- Necessity as the supreme law of states
Written in a grave and lucid style, The Logic of War is both a diagnosis of our present and a warning for the future. It is a defining text for readers of history, strategy, and international politics?an uncompromising realist statement for an age where illusions collapse and necessity reigns.