Top 57 Quotes & Sayings by Brent Scowcroft

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American public servant Brent Scowcroft.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Brent Scowcroft

Brent Scowcroft was a United States Air Force officer who was a two-time United States National Security Advisor, first under U.S. President Gerald Ford and then under George H. W. Bush. He served as Military Assistant to President Richard Nixon and as Deputy Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs in the Nixon and Ford administrations. He served as Chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board under President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2005, and advised President Barack Obama on choosing his national security team.

But there is scant evidence to tie Saddam to terrorist organizations, and even less to the Sept. 11 attacks.
First of all, I think the Saudis are deeply concerned about the collapse of negotiations between the Israelis and the Palestinians and the resumption of conflict.
America has never seen itself as a national state like all others, but rather as an experiment in human freedom and democracy. — © Brent Scowcroft
America has never seen itself as a national state like all others, but rather as an experiment in human freedom and democracy.
Europeans are familiar with terrorism and violence. We have not experienced a true conflict on our soil in a hundred years, and especially not one that involved 3,000 dead.
My point was that removing Saddam should not have been our highest priority. Fighting terrorism should have been our number one concern, followed by the Palestinian peace process.
After all, we didn't bring democracy to Germany in 1945; Hitler destroyed democracy there first.
Osama bin Laden is going after us to get us out of the region, so he can deal with the regimes that he sees in the region, or replace them with purists.
But figuring out Saddam Hussein was one our greatest mysteries. He marched to his own drummer and frequently as this unfolded he made decisions which were sometimes inexplicable to us and sometimes didn't look very smart.
An idea can be as flawless as can be, but its execution will always be full of mistakes.
To sum up, the position we took was that since we didn't know the internal situation in Iraq nor Saddam Hussein, that our best bet was to take counsel from the people who did know him and who did deal with him.
If Iraq were to descend into chaos, the Europeans would feel the effects just as much as we would.
Saddam's ouster will not necessarily lead to the same result, since Iraq lacks democratic traditions. Democracy doesn't just consist of holding elections.
Many Sunnis, who are still stuck in the Saddam era mindset and believe Iraq belongs to them, are trying to prevent a new country from developing at all. — © Brent Scowcroft
Many Sunnis, who are still stuck in the Saddam era mindset and believe Iraq belongs to them, are trying to prevent a new country from developing at all.
So far the changes in the president in his second term have been mainly of a rhetorical nature.
But, if you believe we should go around the world overturning regimes to make little United States, I don't agree with that, because I don't think we're capable of doing that.
The Iraqi elections were an important first step.
Saddam is a familiar dictatorial aggressor, with traditional goals for his aggression.
You know, different people are going to react different ways. And I don't think we should be intolerable because people do things a little differently.
Progress is only possible if the United States and its allies work together.
The Iraqis need help establishing a government. We have to provide them with security.
The UN could help the Iraqi government get on its feet and help the United States withdraw a bit more.
Simply killing everyone who is already a terrorist today won't solve the problem.
I'm afraid that the United States is more isolated today than at any other time in my memory.
It is beyond dispute that Saddam Hussein is a menace.
The Europeans must finally understand the incredible shock triggered by the attacks of September 11.
But the central point is that any campaign against Iraq, whatever the strategy, cost and risks, is certain to divert us for some indefinite period from our war on terrorism.
Yes, Israel's our ally. But, are the Palestinians our enemy? No, they are not.
We must find out where the roots of terrorism lie.
The radical elements in Islam are very dangerous.
Russia right now is searching for its soul. It's trying to figure out what it really is.
It's not for nothing that the Iranians are known as rug merchants. They are.
I think there's nothing more dangerous than mislearning lessons of history, and we do it perpetually.
Perhaps the most troubling area in the world goes from the Balkans through the Middle East and in Central Asia.
Much of what we know about mathematics and trade comes from the Arabs. Then came stagnation, and now they're the West's whipping boy. This is a problem that cannot be solved overnight, and certainly not militarily.
Who is the guarantor, if there is one, of a more stable world? It's the United States.
I don't think the Chinese look out at the world and want to overturn the system.
A colossal event is upon us, the birth of a New World Order. — © Brent Scowcroft
A colossal event is upon us, the birth of a New World Order.
I think that America is a part of the world, that we want to cooperate with the world. We are not the dominant power in the world, that everyone falls in behind us. But we want to reach out and cooperate.
We can't make China a friend, but we can behave to make them an enemy.
If you look back at the first Gulf war, the Arabs sent forces, they sent money. So their interests in Iraq are clear, but they're nowhere to be seen now. Why? Because right now, it's dangerous to be seen as supporting the United States.
For most of mankind, the average person knew what was happening in his own village and the next one, and nothing beyond that, and he didn't care, so that leaders were able to guide their countries almost irrespective of what people really thought because they weren't involved in it. Now, everybody knows what's happening instantaneously.
I think America has to do more than be a broker now. Because both the Palestinians are weak and Israel is very weak.
Everybody is within reach of a television set. And so they're all politicized, and they're all stimulated, and then they have these desires, pleasures, hates, resentments, and so on, and they're reacting instantaneously.
Because national borders are eroding, because of the growth of non-state actors. It's a different kind of a world. We are tied down by a tiny little country - Iraq. It's amazing, given the disparity in military economic strength. It's a world where most of the big problems spill over national boundaries, and there are new kinds of actors and we're feeling our way as to how to deal with them.
The art of diplomacy is to take an opportunity and turn it into something.
America wants to work with friends, with allies, with people of good will, to make this a better world.
I believe the Chinese are gradually realizing that they're dependent on the system that, as they run out of energy, for example, they have to reach out to foreign sources for energy, for raw materials. They have to reach out to the world for markets. They have to export. They have to maintain full employment. They've got a terrible population problem. So they need a stable world, in a way.
Since the days of Peter the Great, Russians have been maybe Europeans who didn't share in the enlightenment and the reformation, or are they Mongol Asians with the European veneer. And they've gone back and forth.
Information technology has politicized the world's population. — © Brent Scowcroft
Information technology has politicized the world's population.
After the '30s, we said, "no more Munichs." And it got us in a lot of problems. Then we said, "No more Vietnams." Now if we say, "No more Iraqs," the next one won't be an Iraq. It will be something different. You can't learn lessons.
We believe we are creating the beginning of a new world order coming out of the collapse of the US-Soviet antagonisms.
The radical elements in Islam are very dangerous. They want to achieve a return to the Islamic purity of the Middle Ages.
America is stronger than any state probably since the Roman Empire. But we can't do what used to be done with that kind of strength.
The Russians are not going to do what we want them to do because we want them to do it.
We have never recognized that Iran lives in a dangerous neighborhood. And it's not surprising that they want some protection. We have not been forthcoming about explaining a security relationship for the region, in which Iran can feel secure and thus maybe willing to do something.
Democracy doesn't just consist of holding elections.
I think above all, what we need with Iran is patience.
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