In war, not a point of view to dispute (7)
I believe the answer is:
wrangle
'dispute' is the definition.
(wrangling is a kind of disputing)
'in war not a point of view' is the wordplay.
I cannot really see how this works, but
an anagram of 'war' is 'wra' which is within the answer.
'point' could be 'n' (N is an example) and 'n' is present in the answer.
This explanation may well be incorrect...
'to' acts as a link.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for wrangle that I've seen before include "Noisy dispute" , "Haggle" , "Complicated dispute" , "angry argument" , "Angry dispute" .)