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In the aftermath of Braddock's defeat, the war in North America stalls. British authority fragments, colonial governments resist coordination, and Commander-in-Cheif John Campbell, Earl of Loudoun focuses on imposing order rather than taking the offensive. Along the frontier, raids multiply, forts stand isolated, and British power exists more on paper than inn practice.

France, however, chooses a different path. In 1756, it sends a professional European general- Louis-Joseph de Montcalm to Canada, marking a decisive escalation of the conflict. Moncalm arrives notion manage the war, but to fight it.  Seeing clearly the weakness caused bu British delay, he identifies a vulnerable target on the shores of Lake Ontario and moves before his enemy can react. 

The result is the siege and fall of Fort Oswego., a swift and methodical campaign that erases Britain's western position, confirms French domination of the Great Lakes, and shocked imperial confidence. Oswego is more than a lost fort- it is proof that momentum, not resources alone, will decide the war.

As Britain absorbs yet another "unthinkable" defeat, the contrast between caution and decisiveness hardens into a defining pattern for 1756. And while Montcalm reshapes the war in North America, events elsewhere are already spiraling towards catastrophe.  

Next time, the conflict explodes in the east, as imperial complacency and ambition ignite disaster in India.