A Quote by Dwight D. Eisenhower

Disarmament, with mutual honor and confidence, is a continuing imperative. — © Dwight D. Eisenhower
Disarmament, with mutual honor and confidence, is a continuing imperative.
Unlike South Africa, which decided on its own to eliminate its nuclear weapons and welcomed inspection as a means of creating confidence in its disarmament, Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance - not even today - of the disarmament, which was demanded of it and which it needs to carry out to win the confidence of the world and to live in peace.
I have overlived the generation with which mutual labors & perils begat mutual confidence and influence.
The world organization debates disarmament in one room and, in the next room, moves the knights and pawns that make national arms imperative.
By mutual confidence and mutual aid - great deeds are done, and great discoveries made
The world's greatest need . . . is mutual confidence. No human being ever knows all the secrets of another's heart. Yet there is enough confidence between mother and child, husband and wife, buyer and seller . . . to make social life a practical possibility. Confidence may be risky, but it is nothing like so risky as mistrust.
Controlled, universal disarmament is the imperative of our time. The demand for it by the hundreds of millions whose chief concern is the long future of themselves and their children will, I hope, become so universal and so insistent that no man, no government anywhere, can withstand it.
We shall never be able to effect physical disarmament until we have succeeded in effecting moral disarmament.
There is an urgent need for disarmament of all kinds, but especially nuclear disarmament.
The relationship of the two problems is rather the reverse. To a great extent disarmament is dependent on guarantees of peace. Security comes first and disarmament second.
We live in a permanent state of bad faith, a mutual representation of ourselves to one another for the sake of remaining sane and following our biological imperative to continue as a species.
The Senate is the last primitive society in the world. We still worship the elders of the tribe and honor the territorial imperative.
We should put away the militaristic outlook. The U.S. should start talking about disarmament, nuclear disarmament, of the region.
If the history of the past fifty years teaches us anything, it is that peace does not follow disarmament - disarmament follows peace.
The world wants disarmament, the world needs disarmament. We have it in our power to help fashion future history.
The popular, and one may say naive, idea is that peace can be secured by disarmament and that disarmament must therefore precede the attainment of absolute security and lasting peace.
Justice has no independent existence; it results from mutual contracts, and establishes itself wherever there is a mutual engagement to guard against doing or sustaining mutual injury.
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