zugzwang
noun·/ˈtsuːkˌtsvɑːŋ/
A situation, especially in chess, in which any move worsens one's position. Action made compulsory and therefore harmful, the burden of having to do something. Zugzwang is asymmetric: the problem is not choice, but forced motion.
Negotiations reached zugzwang; every concession weakened them, yet waiting looked like defeat.
Etymology
From German Zug “move, pull” + Zwang “compulsion.” A crisp compound for a cruel condition: obligation as trap.
Related Words
stalemateno legal moves; adjacent but different
impasseblocked progress; not necessarily move-forced
Pyrrhicvictory that damages the victor; kin in consequence
antinomya conflict of principles; a philosophical cousin