A Quote by Winston Churchill

No one can guarantee success in war, but only deserve it. — © Winston Churchill
No one can guarantee success in war, but only deserve it.
It is never possible to guarantee success, it is only possible to deserve it.
We can not guarantee success, we can strive to deserve it.
Success in war was the only success that counted; failure was a disgrace to be wiped out only by starting another war and winning it.
The only artist who does not deserve respect is the one who works to please the public, for commercial success or for official success.
As human beings, not only do we seek resolution, but we also feel that we deserve resolution. However, not only do we not deserve resolution, we suffer from resolution. We don't deserve resolution; we deserve something better than that. We deserve our birthright, which is the middle way, an open state of mind that can relax with paradox and ambiguity.
Of course war is horrible, but at present it's still the only guarantee of peace.
Good attitudes among players do not guarantee a team's success, but bad attitudes guarantee it's failure.
Hard work alone won't guarantee success, but without hard work, I'll guarantee you won't have success.
The unexpected cannot guarantee success, but it guarantees the best chance of success.
Sir! Men who desert their comrades in war deserve to be shot! And Officers who intrude for them deserve to be hung!
Past success is no guarantee of future success, so I have learned to be an entrepreneur. I began to produce and direct my own projects.
I want peace, and believe it can only be reached through union and war, and I will ever conduct war with a view to perfect an early success.
Confidence is not a guarantee of success, but a pattern of thinking that will improve your likelihood of success, a tenacious search for ways to make things work.
Our soldiers deserve better. They need a plan for success. They need an administration that is honest about the costs of war, human and otherwise, and they need full accountability and oversight on Capitol Hill.
Each one of these treaties is a step for the maintenance of peace, an additional guarantee against war. It is through such machinery that the disputes between nations will be settled and war prevented.
Neither should men study war with a view to the enslavement of those who do not deserve to be enslaved; but first of all they should provide against their own enslavement, and in the second place obtain empire for the good of the governed, and not for the sake of exercising a general despotism, and in the third place they should seek to be masters only over those who deserve to be slaves.
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