War hadn't disappeared. It had just become a high-speed, automated trade deficit.… The year is 2026, and the landscape of conflict has shifted from the trenches to the “Silicon Valleys” of the front lines. The following story explores the paradox of the unmanned battlefield. The Ghost Garrison Commander Elias Thorne didn’t look at a map; he looked at a data stream. In the command center of Task Force Aegis, there were no mess halls, no medical bays, and no rhythm of soldiers’ boots. Instead, the air hummed with the cooling fans of server racks. “Unit 7 is down,” a technician muttered. On the screen, a $4 million “Stalker” hexapod—a multi-terrain unmanned vehicle—had been neutralized by a $500 hobbyist drone carrying a shaped charge. Elias thought back to the old manuals. A decade ago, the cost of a soldier was a mosaic of human variables: basic training, three square meals a day, life insurance, and the heavy political pr...