Bargains! PROMOTIONS

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

The Proxy Century

Why Small Wars Decide Big Empires

Viktor Romcev

$130.95   $111.35

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Vij Books
10 March 2026
In every headline conflict, there is usually another war running in the shadows. States' arm movements, they do not admit to backing, deny casualties they quietly caused, and call disasters ""local disputes"" when everyone knows better. This book opens up that hidden layer, explaining why so many contests between great powers are now fought as proxy wars rather than open invasions.

Across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, cold war proxy conflicts, modern proxy conflicts, and small wars, big empires have quietly redrawn borders and strained treasuries. Drawing on strategy, economics, and political science, this book shows how hybrid warfare strategy actually works in practice, how patrons manage clients, and why seemingly cheap interventions so often spiral into expensive quagmires for both states and societies.

Written for policy watchers, journalists, and readers of security studies, it also speaks to anyone trying to understand the international relations of war without jargon or romanticism. You will see how private military companies fit into this ecosystem, how sanctions and covert money flows enable covert interventions book-style operations, and how to read today's crises with a clearer eye. By the end, you will know which questions to ask when the next conflict flares on your screen, which trade-offs leaders are trying to hide, and how ordinary people pay the price even when their country is not officially at war.
By:  
Imprint:   Vij Books
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   472g
ISBN:   9788199786837
ISBN 10:   8199786833
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Viktor Romcev writes about the hard edges of power: how states, movements, and markets turn resources into organised violence. His work focuses on the messy space between open war and formal peace, where deniable operations, covert aid, and commercial security actors quietly reshape entire regions. Drawing on years of close study of conflicts from the mid-twentieth century to the present, he is interested less in slogans and more in how incentives, logistics, and institutions actually work. A long-standing fascination with the imperial rivalries of Central and Eastern Europe gives his writing a historical depth that resists easy narratives of novelty. Across his books and essays, his aim is simple: to give readers clear, durable tools for thinking about force, so that they can see through official stories and recognise who is really bearing the costs of modern warfare.

See Also