The First Casualty of War is Hope
That phrase lands with a thud, doesn’t it? “The first casualty of war is hope.” It feels older than language, like something carved into stone by a survivor who has seen too much. Whether or not anyone famous said it first is almost irrelevant. The idea resonates because war does not begin with bullets or bombs. It begins with the slow erosion of belief – belief in reason, in compromise, in shared humanity, in tomorrow being better than today. Once hope goes, the rest follows with grim inevitability. War is often described as a clash of armies, strategies, and political interests, but emotionally and psychologically it is something far more intimate and destructive. It dismantles the quiet assumptions that allow ordinary life to function. People wake each morning believing their homes will still stand by nightfall, that their loved ones will return safely, that institutions exist to protect rather than harm. These are forms of hope so basic we barely recognize them. War strips t...