What made that lone reference so explosive wasn’t its length, but its placement. In a document that carefully avoided personality and power, invoking the President even once felt like breaking a silent rule. Every word around it suddenly looked deliberate, as if the drafters had threaded a needle between public neutrality and private messaging. To some, it read like quiet deference; to others, like a subtle reminder of who ultimately owns the decisions on the page.
As the debate spread, the document itself became secondary to that single sentence. Supporters argued it showed accountability at the very top. Critics saw it as a calculated move to project authority without accepting full responsibility. In the end, the mystery of that reference revealed something larger: in an age of hyper-scrutiny, power often speaks loudest in what it barely dares to say.