WAR: The Glorious Endings of Our Wars

Vietnam’s Paris Peace Accords were violated before the ink dried. Iraq was declared “sovereign, stable, and self-reliant” — then lost forty percent of its territory to ISIS within thirty months. Afghanistan’s three-hundred-thousand-strong army dissolved in eleven days. In this fourth article in the Eight Critical Skills war series, we examine the final scenes of America’s three longest wars — the helicopter evacuations, the collapsing armies, the enemies walking into presidential palaces through the front door — and ask what, precisely, eight trillion dollars and nine hundred thousand lives purchased. The answer, in every case, was the precise opposite of the promise. Non-partisan. Data-driven. Devastating.

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Courage and Consequence – The Architect Behind the Curtain

Bayard Rustin organized the 1963 March on Washington in seven weeks, personally taught Martin Luther King Jr. the principles of Gandhian nonviolence, and co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He was the civil rights movement’s most technically brilliant mind — and was deliberately kept in the background because he was openly gay. He served the cause anyway. This Courage and Consequence profile examines the strategic sacrifice of a man who built what others took credit for, and the cost of principled service in a movement that practiced one form of justice while denying another.

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Courage and Consequence – 2,500 Names In a Jar

Most people have heard about Oskar Schindler. He saved 1,100 Jews. A movie. Almost nobody knows Irena Sendler — and she saved 2,500. No movie. A Polish social worker who walked into the Warsaw Ghetto every day for over a year, carrying forged papers and a death wish from the Gestapo. She smuggled 2,500 Jewish children out — in ambulances, coffins, potato sacks, and through the sewers — and buried their real names in glass jars under an apple tree. She was captured, tortured until her legs were broken, and sentenced to death. She never gave up a single name. Her story was buried for sixty years until four high school girls in Kansas refused to believe a single sentence in a magazine. This is her story.

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Courage and Consequence – The Vote That Saved a Presidency

On May 16, 1868, an obscure Kansas senator named Edmund G. Ross stood in a packed Senate chamber and cast the single vote that acquitted President Andrew Johnson — the first president ever impeached. JFK called it the most heroic act in American history. Modern historians call it a profile in corruption, not courage. The truth lies somewhere in between, and it reveals something unsettling about every republic: sooner or later, the fate of the nation depends on a single vote cast for reasons no one can verify. This is the next installment of Courage and Consequence.

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WAR: The First Decision Is the Only Decision That Matters

Every American war since 1945 shares a flaw deeper than cost or escalation: the strategic objective was undefined, contradictory, or politically impossible before the first weapon was fired. In this third installment of the Civic Sage War Series, we apply the Eight Critical Skills to the decision that determines everything — the decision to begin. From Lyndon Johnson’s private confession that Vietnam was “not worth fighting for” to the four incompatible objectives driving the Iran war today, We trace the structural failure that the U.S. Army’s own War College calls “lost before the first shots were fired.” Wars don’t drift into failure. They are born into it.

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