Jonas Merakai writes at the intersection of airpower, emerging military technologies, and the institutions that decide how force is used. His work is driven by a simple concern: when tools change faster than doctrines, the greatest risks are often conceptual - sloppy definitions, borrowed metaphors, and unexamined assumptions about control. He approaches autonomy and swarming as questions of strategy and governance as much as engineering, with an emphasis on how real organisations translate technical possibility into rules, training, and operational practice.Merakai is interested in the way modern air combat inherits older patterns of thought: the bomber debates, air defence revolutions, electronic warfare contests, and the recurring belief that a new machine will finally make war clean, quick, or decisive. Against that background, he focuses on the less glamorous determinants of effectiveness: communications links, identification under uncertainty, logistics capacity, and the design of command authority. His style is analytical but readable, aimed at readers who want clarity without hype and scepticism without cynicism.A quiet thread running through his writing is the long memory of twentieth-century air war and its landscapes - airfields, memorials, and contested skies that turned industrial capacity and doctrinal choices into national fate. That historical gravity informs his insistence that autonomy is not merely a technical upgrade, but a shift in who bears risk, how decisions are made, and what can be credibly controlled when violence moves at machine speed.