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Observers use several different terms when discussing how a war ends: ceasefire, armistice and termination. A ceasefire (停戰, ceasefire) is a temporary halt to fighting, usually ordered by field commanders or the combatants themselves. An armistice (休戰, armistice) is an official suspension of hostilities agreed by national authorities or the senior military leadership of both sides. Ending a war outright is a termination (終戰, termination). After termination, parties may sign a peace treaty (平和協定, peace treaty) to try to cement a lasting peace.
In July 1953, the United Nations, North Korea and Chinese forces signed an Armistice Agreement to end the Korean War. President Syngman Rhee refused to sign, insisting on a northward advance for reunification. Although “armistice agreement” is the technically correct term, the official Korean translation used the word “정전” (ceasefire), and the two terms have since become mixed in common usage.
Labels matter less than conduct. An armistice can hold for decades if neither side seeks provocation. Conversely, a formally declared end to hostilities can collapse quickly if one party instigates fighting. The U.S. and Vietnam signed a peace agreement in Paris in 1973, yet large-scale combat resumed within two years.
President Trump abruptly said he would end the war with Iran, telling reporters, “All I have to do is withdraw from Iran. I will leave within two to three weeks.” He added that he would pull U.S. forces out regardless of any agreement if he judged Iran incapable of developing nuclear weapons. As antiwar sentiment grew at home and Iran’s stiff resistance produced a battlefield stalemate, he began building a rationale for a unilateral withdrawal.
Trump has previously signaled an intent to end conflicts and then expanded operations days later for unrelated reasons, a pattern that undercuts his credibility. European and other international partners greeted this latest declaration with skepticism.
It has been a month since the U.S. and Israel launched airstrikes on Iran and touched off this conflict. The spike in oil prices has pushed up inflation and slowed economies worldwide, inflicting significant pain across nations. Few trust Trump, yet many hope he will actually bring the fighting to an end. It remains difficult to understand how American voters put such a figure in the presidency; his choices have made life harder for people beyond U.S. borders.











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