The battles that decide the future no longer happen on battlefields - they happen inside infrastructure.Power in the modern world is no longer exercised primarily through armies, borders, or ideology. It is exercised through energy grids, undersea cables, logistics hubs, payment rails, and supply chains that determine what can move, what can function, and what can collapse. Control infrastructure, and you control outcomes long before conflict becomes visible.The Infrastructure Wars explains how nations, corporations, and systems compete by shaping the physical and digital foundations of daily life. From energy dependency and shipping chokepoints to data cables and logistics optimization, this book reveals how infrastructure has become the decisive arena of modern power - not as a future risk, but as a present reality already determining economic stability, political leverage, and strategic dominance.Rather than focusing on military confrontation or speculative technology, this book analyzes how infrastructure quietly replaced force as the primary mechanism of coercion. It shows why modern states cannot disengage from the systems they depend on, why competition increasingly takes the form of bottlenecks rather than invasions, and why resilience has become more important than superiority.Clear, restrained, and structurally grounded, The Infrastructure Wars is written for readers who want to understand how power actually operates beneath policy debates and geopolitical headlines. It is not about who is winning or losing today, but about why the rules of conflict themselves have changed - and why infrastructure is now the battlefield no one can afford to ignore.