Top 1200 Nuclear Deterrence Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular Nuclear Deterrence quotes.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
It is hard to put a price on some things. What is the value of having prevented nuclear weapons from getting into the hands of a dictator like Saddam Hussein - or of Gadhafi?
We must abolish nuclear weapons, or they will abolish us.
The Israelis have nuclear bombs but we have the children bomb and these human bombs must continue until liberation. — © Yusuf al-Qaradawi
The Israelis have nuclear bombs but we have the children bomb and these human bombs must continue until liberation.
Long before the terrifying potential of the arms race was recognized, there was a widespread instinctive abhorrence of nuclear weapons, and a strong desire to get rid of them.
It's not brain surgery. It's not nuclear physics. It's television. It's only television.
We still live in a world where if you have nuclear weapons, you are buying power; you are buying insurance against attack.
The pursuit by the Iranian regime of nuclear weapons represents a direct threat to the entire international community, including to the United States and to the Persian Gulf region.
I spent a lot of my childhood in Spain. My nuclear family lives in Spain and has lived there for a long time.
I can't understand why anyone would want nuclear warheads. If you shoot them off, it's not like you can take over that country-all you do is kill millions of people.
If we have isolated individuals able to inflict enormous harm, imagine what a single lunatic can do with a nuclear weapon. I think the whole base of civil society is at risk.
The decision to use the atom bomb on Japanese cities, and the consequent buildup of enormous nuclear arsenals, was made by governments, on the basis of political and military perceptions.
The world has achieved brilliance without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
If the United States wants to prevent other countries from acquiring the bomb, it must be prepared to reduce and eventually end its own reliance on nuclear weapons.
We should refuse to settle for a deal that fails to secure the release of American hostages and paves Iran's path toward realizing its nuclear weapon ambitions. — © Thom Tillis
We should refuse to settle for a deal that fails to secure the release of American hostages and paves Iran's path toward realizing its nuclear weapon ambitions.
Such is the nature of comic strips. Once established, their half-life is usually more than nuclear waste. Typically, the end result is lazy, rich cartoonists.
I think one country with nuclear weapons is one country too many.
Combined families often get bad reviews, but the family my children got when they traded away 'the suffocating four-person' nuclear one is one that has benefited all of them.
The problem here is that there will always be some uncertainty about how quickly Saddam can acquire nuclear weapons. But we don't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.
From 1965 to 1973, more munitions fell on Cambodia than on all of World War II Japan, including the two nuclear bombs of August 1945.
Every serious nuclear accident involves operator error, so you want to eliminate the operator altogether.
While maintaining our nuclear potential at the proper level, we need to devote more attention to developing the entire range of means of information warfare.
What we have said and - and - and with which I concur is that we should use every diplomatic and political vehicle that's available to us to keep Iran from becoming a nuclear capability state.
I want to move to a world of no nuclear weapons but I want to do that through multilateral disarmament so that we all disarm together.
The spread of nuclear weapons is the greatest threat facing the country-and I would argue facing humanity.
I think my mom drove by a nuclear power plant when she was pregnant. But I wouldn't be in 'The Station Agent' if she hadn't.
If a country is suspected of going nuclear, you need to understand why. Why does it feel insecure?
If we don't continue to pursue alternative, emissions-free energy sources like nuclear fuel, we are at risk of increasing our dependence on costly natural gas.
A man you can bait with a Tweet is not a man we can trust with nuclear weapons.
My father-in-law was a nuclear-submarine captain. My father was in the military.
Even when nuclear power plants go horribly wrong, they do less damage to the planet and its people than coal-burning stations operating normally.
I hate people. People make me pro-nuclear.
Iran has never, is not, and will never seek nuclear weapons.
There are contingency plans in the NATO doctrine to fire a nuclear weapon for demonstrative purposes, to demonstrate to the other side that they are exceeding the limits of toleration in the conventional area.
I have sacrificed my freedom and risked my life in order to expose the danger of nuclear weapons which threatens this whole region. I acted on behalf of all citizens and all of humanity.
The arms race is a race between nuclear weapons and ourselves.
I've always been concerned about global warming. It seemed to me like working in nuclear power was a logical way to do something to help the environment.
Above all else, we need a reaffirmation of political commitment at the highest levels to reducing the dangers that arise both from existing nuclear weapons and from further proliferation.
If you want to save the natural environment, you just use nuclear. You grow more food on less land, and people live in cities. It's not rocket science. — © Michael Shellenberger
If you want to save the natural environment, you just use nuclear. You grow more food on less land, and people live in cities. It's not rocket science.
I'm staying," Henry said, annoyed. "Why?" "Because, if I leave, it would be like abandoning two mentally challenged people in a nuclear waste dump.
It was announced today that Iran has reached a deal with the U.S. to limit its nuclear program and send most of its uranium to Russia. Then Americans said, 'That's great! Wait, WHAT?'
It was also during my tenure of office that the Japanese Government agreed to the conclusion of a Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and signed it, pursuing a policy in harmony with the avowed desire of the people.
In my judgment, the JCPOA for whatever its limitations, was succeeding on its own terms in blocking Iran's pathways to producing fissile material for a nuclear weapon on short order.
Despite claims by some to the contrary, we have heard numerous times in hearings and briefings by experts that existing technologies do not fully or effectively detect nuclear material.
Weapons of mass destruction - nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons - are just that, and no cause can excuse their use.
Football isn't nuclear physics, but it's not so simple that you can make it simple. It takes some explaining to get it across.
North Korea. Not only does North Korean have nuclear weapons, but their leadership appears to not be rational.
Indeed, the whole human species is endangered, by nuclear weapons or by other means of wholesale destruction which further advances in science are likely to produce.
American nuclear weapons would almost certainly start being removed from Britain within 12 months of a Labour government gaining power.
The U.N. Security Council ordered Iraq in April 1991 to relinquish all capabilities to make biological, chemical and nuclear weapons as well as long-range missiles.
Iran can never get a nuclear weapon, and it never will as long as I have anything to say about it. — © Maggie Hassan
Iran can never get a nuclear weapon, and it never will as long as I have anything to say about it.
Any deal that allows Iran to enrich uranium, which allows them to ultimately break out within a few months with a nuclear weapon, is a disaster for the world.
If we take into account the existence of our planet, we have to recognise that we are guests that spend a short and very determined period in this world, and all we leave behind is nuclear waste.
Ukraine announced plans to open Chernobyl, their nuclear disaster site, to tourists. They say it's just like Disneyland, except the 6-foot mouse is real.
With a giant battery, we'd be able to address the problem of intermittency that prevents wind and solar from contributing to the grid in the same way that coal and gas and nuclear do today.
It's very personal in California to live within hours, and sometimes just a few miles, of earthquake faults when nuclear plants were being built.
I'm not a film-school guy. I was a high-school dropout. I was on a nuclear submarine. I was an electrician. I was a house painter.
In the late '30's when I was in college, physics - and in particular, nuclear physics - was the most exciting field in the world.
While maintaining our nuclear potential at the proper level, we need to devote more attention to developing the entire range of means of information warfare
We need nuclear energy now, and we will need it in the future.
I can't understand why anyone would want nuclear warheads. If you shoot them off, it's not like you can take over that country - all you do is kill millions of people.
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