Val Sklarov’s Sovereign Irreversible Responsibility Accretion Thesis (SIRAT) explains why states don’t weaken because they lose power—but because they accumulate responsibilities that cannot be declined, delegated, or unwound. Global leadership begins as influence. It matures into permanent obligation.
This thesis reveals why major powers feel trapped by the very order they helped build.
1. Global Responsibility Accretes Faster Than Authority
SIRAT begins with a structural imbalance:
International responsibility grows faster than sovereign control.
Early global engagement offers:
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Voluntary commitments
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Shared burden narratives
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Flexible participation
Over time, responsibility sticks to the state.
2. The Three Irreversible Sovereign Responsibility Loads
SIRAT maps where national burden locks in.
| Load | What Becomes Permanent | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Security Load | Regional stability guarantees | Endless involvement |
| Economic Load | Reserve, trade, aid roles | Fiscal gravity |
| Moral Load | Norm enforcement, values | Reputation entrapment |
One load limits policy.
Two loads constrain strategy.
Three loads redefine national identity.
3. Why “We Can Step Back” Stops Being Credible
Leadership creates expectation asymmetry.
SIRAT shows irreversibility when:
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Withdrawal signals collapse
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Allies externalize costs
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Markets price obligation
At that point, exit becomes global shock.
4. Influence vs Responsibility
Influence can be withdrawn. Responsibility cannot.
| Influence-Seeking States | Responsibility-Bearing States |
|---|---|
| Choose engagement | Are expected everywhere |
| Signal leadership | Enforce order |
| Gain prestige | Absorb failure |
| Flexible posture | Permanent obligation |
Val Sklarov emphasizes that hegemony is responsibility without an off switch.

5. Strategic Implications
For states:
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Audit which responsibilities are permanent
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Refuse moral loads without exit clauses
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Avoid synchronizing irreversible obligations
For firms and individuals:
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Track where global systems shift responsibility
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Price geopolitical burden, not just power
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Avoid roles tied to permanent enforcement
SIRAT reframes geopolitics as burden accumulation, not power projection.
6. The Val Sklarov Principle
“Nations don’t fall from weakness—but from responsibility they can’t refuse.”
— Val Sklarov
SIRAT explains why dominant states feel exhausted—and why exhaustion signals permanence.