Praxeology begins with acting man, and once war is viewed from that starting point the first truth is plain: armies do not escape scarcity because they drape themselves in flags. They still choose means to attain ends and still economize under scarcity, often discovering too late that yesterday's efficient method has become today's ruinous indulgence. War is a capital allocation problem under conditions of violence. The military must decide what to build, where to place it, how to protect it, and who gets authority to move it, all while the enemy searches for the cheapest possible method of making those choices look stupid.
For more than a century the modern state answered this problem through concentration. It built large bases, large ships, large airframes, large depots, and the vast bureaucracies needed to procure, fuel, repair, and justify them. Concentration looked rational because industrial warfare rewarded scale, because steel and oil favored nations that could mass-produce, and because a state that taxes millions can hide immense blunders inside an immense revenue stream. If a weapons program failed, the penalty was seldom liquidation. The usual penalty was a hearing, a white paper, and another appropriation.
That world is breaking apart because the relationship between offensive cost and destructive effect has inverted. A cheap drone does not need to equal the total value of what it strikes. It only needs to reach a transformer yard, a radar array, a fuel tank, a runway, or the exposed roofline of an armored vehicle. Once it can do that reliably enough, the arithmetic turns savage: the defender spends millions to build and maintain a system whose function can be interrupted by something assembled in a workshop, guided by commodity electronics, and sacrificed without ceremony. The drone's power lies entirely in expendability.
Asymmetry, understood praxeologically, means that actors seek effective means, not expensive ones. A five-figure tool that imposes an eight-figure repair bill has done something more interesting than advance technology: it has shifted the field of action in favor of the combatant who can substitute cheap precision for expensive mass. A state military organized around prestige platforms and centrally managed logistics now carries a structural burden that a dispersed adversary sheds by default. Every elegant concentration of capital becomes a menu of targets.
The damage reaches beyond hardware because military power includes the visible platform along with training pipelines, spare parts, repair facilities, munitions stocks, communications links, satellite time, fuel distribution, and the command posts that coordinate them all. A single successful strike against a narrow bottleneck can idle an entire chain of expensive assets whose cost remains on the books even while their utility vanishes. The cheap weapon appears to perform miracles because it finds pressure points that the centralized builder never imagined anyone could reach at that price.
Rothbard understood the political anatomy of this long before anyone strapped explosives to commercial airframes. In "War, Peace, and the State" he argued that any war against another state involves the increase and extension of taxation-aggression over the state's own people, that state war exports violence outward and imports regimentation inward. The state-run military never bears its own costs. It socializes them. A government can keep feeding a brittle war machine because the taxpayers funding it are not the officials designing it, and the young men who may be conscripted to fill its ranks are not the ministers who describe sacrifice as noble. The balance sheet is political before it is technical.
Hoppe's critique of monopoly defense cuts into the same problem from an institutional angle. An agency funded by compulsion does not have to minimize cost the way a competitive protector would, because poor performance does not automatically sever revenue. In a world where cheap drones punish concentration, that incentive failure becomes impossible to ignore. An insurer defending actual property would ask which mix of dispersal, camouflage, hardening, redundancy, local fabrication, and small unmanned countermeasures lowers expected losses at the lowest cost. A state monopoly asks a different question: what can Congress, the procurement office, the legacy contractor, and the general staff all approve without disturbing the habits that built the system?
Decentralization of command follows from this as a practical necessity, not a romantic preference drawn from guerrilla mythology. On a battlefield where information decays quickly and targets appear for seconds, the squad that hears the rotor or sees the thermal bloom possesses knowledge that the distant headquarters cannot acquire in time to matter. Authority has to move downward if force is to move intelligently. A centralized command structure can still issue grand objectives and allocate broad resources, but when it tries to manage every engagement from the rear it turns delay into doctrine, and cheap systems punish delay with particular force.
The fragility runs deeper than tempo alone. Centralized command invites centralized sensing and centralized authorization chains, each of which produces its own electronic signature and its own bottleneck. When every strike approval, drone launch, and counterbattery request must climb and descend a hierarchy, the hierarchy itself becomes part of the target package. A force that distributes initiative across smaller units, with clear mission boundaries and local discretion, sheds much of this fragility by trading ceremonial control for survivability.
States resist the adjustment for reasons that have nothing to do with military effectiveness and everything to do with administrative instinct. Centralization makes budgets legible, careers manageable, procurement auditable, and political oversight easy to perform on camera. A minister can point to a fleet, an air wing, a missile battery, or a national command center and claim visible strength. He cannot point with equal pride to thousands of semi-autonomous cells equipped with cheap aircraft, local manufacturing capability, cached munitions, dispersed fuel, and standing authority to act without waiting for permission. The centralized state prefers weapons that resemble itself: expensive, supervised, promotable, and televised. Expense itself is a political argument for seriousness. The drone age strips that argument bare, revealing that a billion-dollar asset which must remain visible, connected, fueled, and stationary long enough to do its job can be less formidable than a thousand improvised threats that disperse after each strike and reappear from another direction tomorrow.
The same logic applies to national infrastructure. States at war depend on ports, rail hubs, refineries, substations, bridges, and air defense nodes whose importance arises from centralization itself. Cheap drones do not need to destroy an entire industrial economy to impose strategic pain; they need only make key nodes intermittently unreliable. Once repair crews, replacement parts, and defensive manpower are drawn into a constant cycle of response, the attacker is no longer destroying objects. He is imposing a permanent tax on concentration.
The future therefore belongs to redundancy, dispersion, concealment, modular production, and command systems built around mission clarity. The force most likely to endure will be the one that assumes every visible concentration will be found, every signal will be hunted, every fixed asset will be revisited, and every delay in authorization will be paid for in blood. The great military fortress of the industrial age, with its majestic capital base and its pyramids of command, is giving way to a harsher order in which resilience beats grandeur and adaptation beats ceremony.
Rothbard and Hoppe approached the question from different directions but converge on the same ground. Rothbard saw that the state wages war by exporting violence abroad and importing regimentation at home. Hoppe saw that monopoly defense corrupts judgment because insulated institutions never face the discipline imposed on actors who must actually bear losses. Cheap drones have sharpened both truths, making the cost of centralization visible to anyone willing to count the wreckage.
The state-run military will be the last institution to learn the lesson because it can survive mistakes that would bankrupt any ordinary organization. It can lose ships, lose bases, lose generators, and lose conscripts, and still demand more money in the name of national survival. Yet reality does not negotiate with budget committees. When low-cost tools can destroy high-cost concentrations, the age of military monopoly begins to consume itself, and the war machine becomes too expensive to protect from the very asymmetries its own centralization invites.