They might actually be used.… They stopped calling it “war” in official briefings. By 2026, the planners in Tokyo, Washington, and Brussels all used the same phrase: “time-compressed conflict.” The assumption was simple—wars had to end quickly or spiral out of control. Supply chains snapped in weeks. Satellites were blinded in hours. Financial systems destabilized in minutes. No one had time for total war anymore. Colonel Sato watched the simulation unfold on a wall of screens. Hypersonic missiles crossed the Taiwan Strait in under ten minutes. Autonomous drones hunted radar signatures. AI systems flagged targets faster than humans could authorize strikes. And above it all—untouched, unlaunched—sat the nuclear arsenals. They were never part of the simulation. Not really. The Shadow That Isn’t Used Sato had studied the Ukraine war years earlier. Not the battles—the absence. Russia never used nuclear weapons. Neither did ...