Senior figures in the opposition party can act to prolong or escalate foreign wars by publicly sabotaging ceasefires and framing negotiated endings as defeats. That dynamic can push administrations toward continued military action even when a halt would reduce civilian harm and economic disruption.
— It shows that partisan posturing by the political opposition can be a direct driver of foreign-policy escalation, not just domestic signaling.
Jeremy Loffredo
2026.04.09
100% relevant
Sen. Chris Murphy’s public denunciation of the Trump‑brokered ceasefire and Democratic committee-level criticisms of the deal are concrete examples used throughout the article.
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