Quotes About War
The country listened to thousands of speeches and read thousands of newspaper columns raking over every argument for and against imperialism and every aspect of the war in the Philippines.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Why do we invest all our skills and resources in a contest for armed superiority which can never be attained for long enough to make it worth having, rather than in an effort to find a modus vivendi with our antagonist—that is to say, a way of living, not dying?
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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On August 27 Richard Harding Davis, star of the American correspondents who were then in Belgium, made his way to Louvain by troop train. He was kept locked in the railroad car by the Germans, but the fire had by then reached the Boulevard Tirlemont facing the railroad station and he could see "the steady straight columns of flames" rising from the rows of houses.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Schlieffen's plan was maintained and Moltke consoled himself with the thought, as he said in 1913, that "We must put aside all commonplaces as to the responsibility of the aggressor.… Success alone justifies war.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Alexander Guchkov, a subsequent Minister of War, testified that he "reached the firm conviction that the war was lost" after Tannenberg. The defeat gave new vigor to the pro-German groups who began openly to agitate for withdrawal from the war. Count Witte was convinced the war would ruin Russia, Rasputin that it would destroy the regime.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Ending a war is a difficult and delicate business. Even intelligent rulers, when they exist, often find themselves unable to terminate a war, should they want to. Each side must become convinced at the same time and with equal certainty that its war aim is either not achievable or not worth the cost or damage to the state.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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the inadvertent by-product of the nobles' passionate pursuit of war.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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We must put aside all commonplaces as to the responsibility of the aggressor.… Success alone justifies war.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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By such accident of the human mind, war, trade, and history are shaped. The
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Everything took on the color of blood.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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The lesson was not yet clear in the 18th century, as America was to learn to her cost in our own century, that the presence of disunity in the military about method and strategy, and among the nation's people about the rightness of the war aim, makes it impossible for a war of any duration to be fought effectively and won.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Moltke closed upon that rigid phrase, the basis for every major German mistake, the phrase that launched the invasion of Belgium and the submarine war against the United States, the inevitable phrase when military plans dictate policy—"and once settled it cannot be altered.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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the French, who had put large expectations in the abasement of Britain that American success would cause, had been disappointed by the weakness of the American military effort. Instead of an aggressive ally, they were tied to a dependent client, unable to establish a strong government and requiring transfusions of men-at-arms and money to keep its war effort alive.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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As they marched the Germans sang. They sang "Deutschland über Alles," "Die Wacht am Rhein," and "Heil dir im Siegeskranz." They sang when they halted, when they billeted, when they caroused. Many who lived through the next thirty days of mounting combat, agony, and terror were to remember the sound of endless, repetitious masculine singing as the worst torment of the invasion.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Humanizing war?! You may as well talk of humanizing Hell. Sir John Fisher
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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As a result, the chief victim of the belligerents was their respective peasantry.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Whatever our lot may be, August 4, 1914, will remain for all eternity one of Germany's greatest days!
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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Where Brooke was embracing cleanness and nobleness, Mann saw a more positive goal. Germans being, he said, the most educated, law-abiding, peace-loving of all peoples, deserved to be the most powerful, to dominate, to establish a "German peace" out of "what is being called with every possible justification the German war.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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had said, "The greatest contribution Vietnam is making … is developing an ability in the United States to fight a limited war, to go to war without arousing the public ire.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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When he smelled battle afar off, Winston Churchill resembled the war horse in Job who turned not back from the sword, but 'paweth in the valley and saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha.' He was the only British minister to have a perfectly clear conviction of what Britain should do and to act upon it without hesitation.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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That vexing problem of war presented by the refusal of the enemy to behave as expected in his own best interest beset them.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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The Prime Minister was not the only person unconcerned with odds and ends of this kind. When a German official, foreseeing the change to a long war of attrition, presented Moltke with a memorandum on the need for an Economic General Staff, Moltke replied, "Don't bother me with economics—I am busy conducting a war.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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To Wilson neutrality was the opposite of isolationism. He wanted to keep out of war in order to play a larger, not a lesser, part in world affairs. He wanted the "great permanent glory" for himself as well as for his country, and he realized he could win it only if he kept America out of the quarrel so that he could act as impartial arbiter.
~ Barbara W. Tuchman
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