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| Formato: | Recurso digital |
| Lenguaje: | inglés |
| Publicado: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Acceso en línea: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19931413 |
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| _version_ | 1866901309823647744 |
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| author | Jovanovic, Vladisav |
| author_facet | Jovanovic, Vladisav |
| contents | <p>This paper argues that the 2026 Iran War reveals a central failure mode of modern coercive strategy: severe material pressure can be generated faster than a politically usable path to revision. By late April 2026, the war had shifted from large-scale strikes toward a fused regime of blockade, blackout, and maximalist public rhetoric. The paper uses Structural Intelligence (SI) to show why the ordinary reading of such a campaign can fail. SI distinguishes coherence from contact and asks whether a system remains answerable under contradiction, cost, consequence, and repair. Applied to the current case, the problem is not only whether blockade damages the target, but whether the coercive system remains corrigible enough to learn from the effects it is producing. The paper develops that claim in five steps. It treats blockade as a cybernetic instrument that can degrade supply, finance, and expectation without necessarily producing political closure. It argues that blackout creates a crisis of signal by degrading visibility for both the target and the pressure-applying side, widening the answerability gap in public and policy judgment. It analyzes the narrative of unconditional surrender as a coherence strategy that can make pressure appear more linear and complete than the field will actually allow. It examines how the maintenance bill of coercion is exported outward into civilians, regional shipping, and neighboring economies, creating a regional liability sink. Finally, it argues that once pressure outruns viable off-ramps, the likely output is not neat compliance but escalatory stalemate and possible threshold reorganization. The paper’s central claim is narrow: blockade, blackout, and surrender rhetoric can increase the visible performance of control while reducing the system’s capacity for politically usable revision.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_19931413 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | Blockade, Blackout, and the Answerability Gap: Structural Intelligence and the Politics of Coercive Control in the 2026 Iran War Jovanovic, Vladisav Structural Intelligence Iran War blockade blackout coercive control answerability gap burden export regional instability <p>This paper argues that the 2026 Iran War reveals a central failure mode of modern coercive strategy: severe material pressure can be generated faster than a politically usable path to revision. By late April 2026, the war had shifted from large-scale strikes toward a fused regime of blockade, blackout, and maximalist public rhetoric. The paper uses Structural Intelligence (SI) to show why the ordinary reading of such a campaign can fail. SI distinguishes coherence from contact and asks whether a system remains answerable under contradiction, cost, consequence, and repair. Applied to the current case, the problem is not only whether blockade damages the target, but whether the coercive system remains corrigible enough to learn from the effects it is producing. The paper develops that claim in five steps. It treats blockade as a cybernetic instrument that can degrade supply, finance, and expectation without necessarily producing political closure. It argues that blackout creates a crisis of signal by degrading visibility for both the target and the pressure-applying side, widening the answerability gap in public and policy judgment. It analyzes the narrative of unconditional surrender as a coherence strategy that can make pressure appear more linear and complete than the field will actually allow. It examines how the maintenance bill of coercion is exported outward into civilians, regional shipping, and neighboring economies, creating a regional liability sink. Finally, it argues that once pressure outruns viable off-ramps, the likely output is not neat compliance but escalatory stalemate and possible threshold reorganization. The paper’s central claim is narrow: blockade, blackout, and surrender rhetoric can increase the visible performance of control while reducing the system’s capacity for politically usable revision.</p> |
| title | Blockade, Blackout, and the Answerability Gap: Structural Intelligence and the Politics of Coercive Control in the 2026 Iran War |
| topic | Structural Intelligence Iran War blockade blackout coercive control answerability gap burden export regional instability |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19931413 |