Freeze–Vote–Rebuild (FVR) is a sequenced, verification-first framework designed to move from active war to a legitimate political outcome and large-scale reconstruction.
It separates three problems that are often entangled: stopping the violence, establishing legitimacy, and rebuilding the country.
Table of Contents
Deep Dives
Theory of ChangeHow verification and sequencing create a path to peace without requiring trust.
Phased TimelineThe sequence of deliverables, entry gates, and exit gates for each phase.
Core Principles & Red LinesThe operational rules (e.g., "Verification-First") and non-negotiable failure triggers.
Context & Scope
What This Is NotClarifying that this is a framework for a process, not a final negotiated treaty.
Deltas Between VersionsHow this operational framework evolved from previous drafts and essays.
Executive Summary
The intent is to create a process that is auditable, conditional, and reversible if compliance breaks—rather than a one-shot bargain that depends on promises.
1. Freeze
Objective: Stop major combat operations under a monitored arrangement.
Ceasefire Terms: Defined geography, prohibited activities, and enforcement triggers.
Verification: Independent monitoring and incident reporting.
Protection: Deconfliction mechanisms and humanitarian corridors for civilians.
2. Vote
Objective: Run a supervised legitimacy process to determine political outcomes.
Electorate: Clear definition including residents plus displaced persons/refugees.
The framework avoids requiring agreement on final status before violence stops. Instead, it uses a supervised legitimacy process to determine outcomes. “Status-neutral” does not mean “values-neutral”; it means the mechanism itself does not predetermine the result.