"For ultimately, the only way to win wars, is to prevent them occurring in the first place"
About this Quote
It sounds like a truism until you notice the quiet repositioning of what counts as a "win". Owen Arthur takes the scoreboard logic of war - victory, defeat, surrender - and replaces it with a preventative metric that is both more humane and more politically awkward. If the only winning move is not to play, then the real battleground shifts to diplomacy, development, intelligence, and the slow, unglamorous work of keeping crises from ripening into conflict. That is a moral claim disguised as a strategic one.
As a statesman from Barbados, Arthur’s line also carries the perspective of smaller nations who live with the consequences of great-power decisions without getting a vote in them. Prevention is not pacifist daydreaming here; it’s a sovereignty argument. For states that can’t "win" wars in any traditional sense, stability is the highest national interest, and the tools of prevention - regional alliances, multilateralism, and norms against intervention - become survival tactics.
The phrasing does extra work. "Ultimately" suggests patience and long horizons, a rebuke to short-term political theater. "Only way" is deliberately absolutist, less an empirical statement than a pressure tactic: it narrows the acceptable policy menu and makes militarism sound not merely costly but conceptually outdated. Arthur’s subtext is that war is an admission of prior failure - of imagination, diplomacy, and leadership - and that the real test of statecraft happens before the shooting starts.
As a statesman from Barbados, Arthur’s line also carries the perspective of smaller nations who live with the consequences of great-power decisions without getting a vote in them. Prevention is not pacifist daydreaming here; it’s a sovereignty argument. For states that can’t "win" wars in any traditional sense, stability is the highest national interest, and the tools of prevention - regional alliances, multilateralism, and norms against intervention - become survival tactics.
The phrasing does extra work. "Ultimately" suggests patience and long horizons, a rebuke to short-term political theater. "Only way" is deliberately absolutist, less an empirical statement than a pressure tactic: it narrows the acceptable policy menu and makes militarism sound not merely costly but conceptually outdated. Arthur’s subtext is that war is an admission of prior failure - of imagination, diplomacy, and leadership - and that the real test of statecraft happens before the shooting starts.
Quote Details
| Topic | Peace |
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