War? What Is It Good For… Absolutely Nothing.
Let’s stop pretending.
War is not glory. It’s not strategy. It’s not even, most of the time, victory.
It’s failure—loud, expensive, televised failure.
And right now, watching the slow grind of escalation around Iran, even the most belligerent leaders are being forced to relearn something history has been screaming for centuries: you can start a war anytime you want—but you don’t get to decide how it ends.
The Lie of Control
Leaders love war in theory.
They imagine clean timelines, decisive strikes, and enemies who fold on cue. They picture something like World War II—a total war ending in unconditional surrender, parades, and rewritten maps.
But that kind of ending is the exception, not the rule.
Even in that war, unconditional surrender only came after cities were flattened, millions were dead, and entire nations ceased to function. It wasn’t a “win.” It was annihilation dressed up as resolution.
Most wars don’t end like that. They end like:
- Vietnam War — tactical dominance, strategic failure
- Iraq War — rapid victory, endless instability
- War in Afghanistan — twenty years, then exit
You can win every battle and still lose the war.
That’s not a paradox—it’s the norm.
The Strait That Won’t Stay Open
Right now, the world is being reminded that chokepoints matter more than bombs.
The Strait of Hormuz is not just a shipping lane. It’s a pressure point on the entire global system.
You can bomb radar installations. You can destroy launch sites. You can flex air superiority.
And still—tankers don’t move.
Sound familiar?
It should. Because the Ho Chi Minh Trail wasn’t stopped either. Not by saturation bombing. Not by technological superiority. Not by confidence.
War doesn’t obey logic. It obeys friction.
Oil Is Power. Food Is Oil. War Is Hunger.
Let’s strip this down to something brutally simple:
- Oil powers economies
- Gas produces fertilizer
- Fertilizer produces food
Break one link—and everything collapses.
The Haber-Bosch process is one of the most important—and least talked about—technologies on Earth. It turns natural gas into nitrogen fertilizer.
No gas? No fertilizer.
No fertilizer? No food.
No food? No stability.
So when conflict threatens energy flows through the Persian Gulf, it’s not just about gas prices.
It’s about whether entire regions can feed themselves.
War doesn’t just destroy cities.
It quietly starves them months later.
War Is Not Strategy
This is where most leaders—especially the loudest ones—get it wrong.
War is not a plan. It’s a tool.
As Carl von Clausewitz famously argued, war is politics by other means.
But here’s the part people conveniently forget:
If war starts as politics, it must end as politics.
Bombs don’t resolve disputes. They rearrange leverage.
Eventually, someone has to sit down and negotiate.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth:
If one side thinks it’s winning, it won’t negotiate.
The Myth of Strength
There’s another illusion cracking right now: that overwhelming military strength guarantees control.
It doesn’t.
Iran isn’t winning because it’s stronger in a conventional sense. It’s winning—if it is—because it’s playing a different game:
- Asymmetric warfare
- Cheap drones
- Economic disruption instead of territorial conquest
Meanwhile, countries that assumed war was obsolete—like Canada—are waking up to a harsher reality.
Alliances like NATO were built on collective strength. But collective strength only works if everyone actually shows up prepared.
Right now? Many aren’t.
Leadership in the Age of Spectacle
Modern war has collided with something even more dangerous than bad strategy:
performative leadership.
When optics matter more than outcomes, you get:
- Massive rescue operations turned into PR events
- Threats designed for headlines, not results
- Escalation driven by ego, not necessity
Even Winston Churchill, no stranger to war, understood this. After Dunkirk, he warned that evacuations are not victories.
Today, that lesson feels lost.
The Hard Truth Nobody Wants to Say
Here it is—the part that cuts through all the noise:
War doesn’t solve the problems it claims to solve.
It:
- Deepens economic fragility
- Destabilizes food systems
- Entrenches political deadlock
- Creates enemies faster than it eliminates them
And most importantly:
It almost never delivers the clean ending leaders promise at the beginning.
So What Is War Good For?
Absolutely nothing.
Not in the way it’s sold.
Not in the way it’s remembered.
Not in the way it actually unfolds.
War is what happens when imagination fails, when diplomacy collapses, and when leaders gamble with systems they don’t fully understand.
It is not strength.
It is not clarity.
It is not resolution.
It is the most expensive way humans have ever invented to admit:
“We couldn’t figure this out.”
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide


