Election cycle impact on war decisions is rarely stated plainly. It should be. Wars that look sustainable on paper often meet their limit at home. Not in a battlefield report. In a voter’s mood. When fuel prices rise, when inflation bites, when deployments stretch, political timelines begin to matter as much as military ones. That shift is subtle. Then it becomes decisive. The Pattern That Keeps Repeating Recent history offers a consistent sequence. The Vietnam War did not end because one side ran out of weapons. It ended when domestic opposition made continuation politically untenable. The Iraq War saw support erode as costs mounted and timelines extended. The War in Afghanistan concluded after years of public fatigue and shifting political priorities. In each case, the battlefield mattered. The ballot box decided. This is not an anomaly. It is a structural feature of democratic systems. The Economic Trigger: Prices That Voters Notice Voters do not track force posture or logisti...
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