Top 1200 Nuclear Missiles Quotes & Sayings - Page 18

Explore popular Nuclear Missiles quotes.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
[Saddam Hussein is aggressively seeking nuclear and biological weapons and ] the United States may well become the target.
What could become a danger to world peace is Iran's nuclear program and the country's open threat to annihilate Israel.
When decisions on nuclear power stations and runways are delayed and the government dilly-dallies, people think they aren't important. — © James Dyson
When decisions on nuclear power stations and runways are delayed and the government dilly-dallies, people think they aren't important.
Since the advent of nuclear weapons, it seems clear that there is no longer any alternative to peace, if there is to be a happy and well world.
There's people out there with nuclear bombs and yet we've got all these politicians trying to make a political platform based on a record. Isn't it ridiculous?
For the sake of future generations, we must continue to work together to realise a world without nuclear weapons.
I never turn on the news over the weekend, short of a nuclear detonation somewhere. I just don't. I don't learn anything from it anymore.
For decades, Iran has covertly worked to develop a nuclear weapons program and has repeatedly violated its international obligations.
Nuclear war would mean abolition of most comforts, and disruption of normal routines, for children and adults alike.
The nuclear arms race is like two people sitting in a pool of gasoline spending all their time making matches.
It is not viable for one country to demand a right to increase and upgrade its nuclear weapons capabilities while asking others to eliminate theirs.
The state and the church seldom approve of anything I do. I don't need their approval. I don't aspire to the heterosexual nuclear family model.
In seeking to counter challenges such as terrorist threats, hostile state activity, or nuclear proliferation, we cannot work in isolation. — © Dominic Grieve
In seeking to counter challenges such as terrorist threats, hostile state activity, or nuclear proliferation, we cannot work in isolation.
The trick in nuclear strategy is to maintain stability by balancing potentials and thus to discourage events from converting the hypothetical to the actual.
But beyond all that, the question that is continually begged is why isn't America leading the way toward total abolition of nuclear weapons.
Nuclear energy is a baseload - meaning it's power that you can run any time you want, day or night - and carbon-free.
The Highway Code can't be that difficult to understand, and yet my brain seems to treat it as a set of nuclear fission instructions in Old Japanese.
My greatest fear is the Iranians acquire a nuclear weapon and give it to a terrorist organization. And there is a real threat of them doing that.
We [The United States] should be prepared to launch a pre-emption strike against Iran to eliminate their nuclear capability.
We have a safe and good command-and-control system. Nobody can take away any nuclear weapon from Pakistan.
The right of an individual to refuse to kill, to torture, or to participate in the preparation for the nuclear destruction of humanity seems to me to be fundamental.
The consensus is that climate change ranks along with nuclear warfare as the top two risks facing human civilization.
The nuclear arsenal that Pakistan has, I believe is secure. I think the government and the military have taken adequate steps to protect that.
Designing new low-yield nuclear weapons for limited strikes dangerously lowers the threshold for their use.
Nuclear war is such an emotional subject that many people see the weapons themselves as the common enemy of humanity.
Nixon did have a secret plan, and I knew that it involved making threats of nuclear war to North Vietnam.
The computer is a greater threat to the [nuclear] family than all the abortion laws and gay rights movements and pornography in the world.
My brain knows best-before dates are a con; my panicky gut treats them like a nuclear countdown.
Even in this nuclear thing, [ Donald Trump] says we should be stronger and expand. What does that mean? So, what is concrete in what he's saying?
The thing that makes countries want to pursue some kind of nuclear deterrent is precisely the fact that they feel threatened.
For while the threat of nuclear holocaust has been significantly reduced, the world remains a very unsettled and dangerous place.
Washington's adventuristic policy, whipping up international tension to the utmost, is pushing mankind towards nuclear catastrophe.
The question arises whether private companies can bear responsibility when considering the large risks involved with nuclear business.
There are two problems for our species' survival - nuclear war and environmental catastrophe - and we're hurtling towards them. Knowingly.
Alice Stewart [is] a much underestimated scientist who has been an indomitable challenger of the establishment and a thorn in the flesh of the nuclear industry.
We must not allow the Iranian regime to use the nation's vast energy resource as a financial pipeline for its nuclear ambitions.
I don't think that Iran with a nuclear capability will be just the problem of the state of Israel. This is a matter that concerns the whole world.
This is one of the worst deals ever made by any country in history. The deal with Iran will lead to nuclear problems. — © Donald Trump
This is one of the worst deals ever made by any country in history. The deal with Iran will lead to nuclear problems.
We keep discussing nuclear power and other issues, but we should spare a thought to the basic needs of our women.
That's the trouble with cookbooks. Like sex education and nuclear physics, they are founded on an illusion. They bespeak order, but they end in tears.
We are a democracy: there are enough checks and balances in our country, and we have an impeccable record of not contributing in any way to nuclear proliferation.
Mankind spends much more on training pilots of aircraft than it does to train the nuclear reactor operators.
The JCPOA has made the world safer. The deal ensures that Israel does not have to live with the threat of a nuclear Iran in its backyard.
President Obama has made it clear that the United States is determined to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
The only thing that really scales up apart from nuclear is solar power from other people's deserts.
There are nuclear-weapons-free zones in several parts of the world already, except that they're not implemented fully, because the U.S. won't allow it.
If you're Iran's minister of defense, I think you'd try to develop at least one nuclear weapon to save yourself from what happened to Iraq.
The issues and challenges surrounding nuclear non-proliferation are continuously evolving. They've changed dramatically at several junctures in recent memory.
You know boys, a nuclear reactor is a lot like women. You just have to read the manual and press the right button. — © Matt Groening
You know boys, a nuclear reactor is a lot like women. You just have to read the manual and press the right button.
The war in Yemen is not a war that we wanted. We had no other option - there was a radical militia allied with Iran and Hezbollah that took over the country. It was in possession of heavy weapons, ballistic missiles and even an air force. Should we stand by idly while this happens at our doorstep, in one of the countries in which al-Qaida has a huge presence? So we responded, as part of a coalition, at the request of the legitimate government of Yemen, and we stepped in to support them.
As long as I'm president of the United States Iran will not get a nuclear weapon. I made that clear when I came into office.
She [Hillary Clinton] wants to start an air war over Syria with Russia, a nuclear-armed power.
The world should be very clear about making sure that Iran does not get nuclear weapons, period.
Crabgrass can grow on bowling balls in airless rooms, and there is no known way to kill it that does not involve nuclear weapons.
Nuclear power plants must be prepared to withstand everything from earthquakes to tsunamis, from fires to floods to acts of terrorism.
I grew up in a very healthy nuclear family, and I was fortunate enough to not have to deal with loss and grief as a child.
The producers of 'Chernobyl' should tell the truth: the accident demonstrates the relative safety, not danger, of nuclear power.
We have wide-ranging joint projects in the nuclear energy sphere, logistics, machine building and trade as a whole [with China].
The only countries that have successfully moved from fossil fuels to low-carbon power have done so with the help of nuclear energy.
The Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons would be infinitely more costly than any scenario you can imagine to stop it.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!