Wars must end quickly

There is an old military instinct that many civilians find uncomfortable but that every serious leader eventually learns: never start a fight you cannot finish. That principle is not about aggression. It is about responsibility. Too often, modern governments enter wars with vague objectives, political slogans or unrealistic hopes that limited pressure alone will somehow force the enemy to compromise. Leaders speak about “sending a message,” “showing resolve” or “managing escalation.” They promise quick operations without sacrifice, limited campaigns without consequences and moral clarity without hard choices. Reality does not work that way. War is not a seminar. It is not a social media campaign. It is not an academic exercise in signaling theory. Once it begins, war becomes a contest of endurance, destruction, logistics, political will and human suffering. The side that understands this earliest usually has the advantage. History repeatedly shows that prolonged wars are often the bloodiest wars. Not because they begin with massive violence, but because leaders hesitate, drift

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