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Collection
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"Practice
does not make perfect. Only perfect practice makes perfect."
The Lombardi Rules
Vince Lombardi
"I
don’t think he ever completely gave it up. It’s like a senator who
wants to become President. At some point, time passes you by and
you know intellectually that it won’t happen, but in your heart
you don’t give up." (Friend of independent counsel Kenneth Stark)
Lazar
"In
the Pentagon, there had been a massive de facto tilt toward
Britain from the very first day. It was the inescapable result of
the 'special relationship'. The depth and breadth of cultural, social
and historic ties between America and Britain were overwhelming.
It is highly unlikely that even Jeane Kirkpatrick, the US ambassador
to the UN, or anyone at the State Department or the White House
understood at first the extent of the assistance we were providing,
especially in communications and intelligence.
"We had, for instance, sent two tankers to Ascension Island,
without which the Task Force could not have made it to the Falklands."
Secretary of the US Navy in 1982, John Lehman
"One step forwards, two steps back." Book
title in 1904
"Revolution
could never grip Berlin. Germans would only storm a railway platform
after first queueing for platform tickets."
"Trust
is good, control better."
"One
fool can ask more questions in a minute than twelve wise men can
answer in an hour." 15 Mar 1918, to pro-war critics in the
Congress of Soviets
"Losing
the Ukraine would be like losing our heads." 1918
"Foolish, or even criminal,
is the word to describe the behaviour of any Army that does
not prepare
itself to master all the various
types of weapon ... that the enemy has or might have."
Vladimir
Ilyich Lenin
"The
administrative developments of scientific war had clogged its
mobility and destroyed its dash; and troubles grew in geometrical
rather that arithmetical progression for each new mile its commanding
officers put between themselves and Medina, their ill-found, insecure
and inconvenient base." p. 139.
"Most
wars are wars of contact, both forces striving into touch to avoid
tactical surprise." p. 200.
"It
seemed to me proven that our rebellion had an unassailable base,
guarded not only from attack, but from the fear of attack. It had
a sophisticated alien enemy, disposed as an army of occupation in
an area greater than could be dominated effectively from fortified
posts. It had a friendly population, of which some two in the hundred
were active, and the rest sympathetic to the point of not betraying
the movements of the minority. The active rebels had the virtues
of secrecy and self-control, and the qualities of speed, endurance
and independence of arteries of supply. They had technical equipment
enough to paralyse the enemy's communications. A province would
be won when we had taught the civilians in it to die for our ideal
of freedom. The presence of the enemy was secondary. Final victory
seemed certain, if the war lasted long enough for us to work it
out." p. 202.
"We
heard that the Turks patrolled their neighbourhood actively at night.
A bad habit this: so we sent off two men to lie by each blockhouse
and fire a few shots after dark. The enemy, thinking it a prelude
to attack, stood-to in their trenches all night, while we were comfortably
sleeping." p. 205.
passage
from p.339 ff. describing the incredible ethnic, social and religious
diversity in Near East.
"In
peace-armies discipline [means] the hunt, not of an average, but
of an absolute; the hundred per cent standard in which the ninety-nine
were played down to the level of the weakest man on parade. The
aim [is] to render the unit a unit, the man a type; in order that
their effort may be calculable, and the collective output even in
grain and bulk. The deeper the discipline, the lower [is] the individual
excellence; also the more sure the performance." p. 347.
"Discipline
[is] a character or a stamp by which to mark off soldiers from complete
men, and obliterate the humanity of the individual. It resolved
itself easiest into the restrictive, and making men not do this
or that: and so could be fostered by a rule severe enough to make
them despair of disobedience .. It was not to impress upon men that
their will must actively second the officers', for then there would
have been, as [] among irregulars, that momentary pause for thought
transmission, or digestion; for the nerves to resolve the relaying
private will into active consequence. On the contrary, each regular
Army sedulously rooted out this significant pause from its companies
on parade. The drill-instructors tried to make obedience an instinct,
a mental reflex, following as instantly on the command as though
the motor power of the individual wills had been invested together
in the system." p. 522.
Seven
Pillars of Wisdom
"With
2000 years of examples behind us we have no excuse when fighting,
for not fighting well."
T.E. Lawrence
"Only the person capable of adapting to everyone will emerge
the victor over all."
"Reserve
your judgements and your words and you maintain your influence."
Lao
Tzu
"A
man who does not lose his reason over certain things has none
to lose." [German dramatist]
Gotthold
Ephraim Lessing
"This
war, like the next war, is the war to end all war."
"No
party in Ireland is prepared to accept anything except the impossible.
But that is no excuse for British government inaction." announcing
plans for partition, 22.12.1919
"We
shall have to fight another war all over again in 25 years at three
times the cost." on Treaty of Versailles
David
Lloyd George
"Humphrey
advised me that on previous occasions a generally acceptable answer
had been that, while one does not seek the office, one has pledged
oneself to the service of one's country and if one's colleagues
persuaded one that that was the best way one could serve, one
might
reluctantly have to accept the responsibility, whatever one's own
private wishes might be."
"General
Howard continued to explain the RAF mentality as he sees it. 'They
want the bomb to be carried around in an aeroplane, you see.
All
they're really interested in is flying around dropping things on
people. Not that they're any good at it - I mean, they couldn't
even find the runway at Port Stanley. They'd probably never even
find Moscow. If they did, they'd probably miss."
"You
need to know things even when you don't need to know them. You
need to know them not because you need to know them but because
you need
to know whether or not you need to know, and if you don't need
to know you still need to know that so you know that there was
no need
to know."
"That's
another of those irregular verbs, isn't it? I give confidential
briefings; you leak; he has been charged under Section 2a of
the
Official Secrets Act."
"While
it is true that the minutes are indeed an authoritative record
of the Committee's deliberations, it is nevertheless undeniable
that
a deliberate attempt at a comprehensive delineation of every contribution
and interpolation would necessitate an unjustifiable elaboration
and wearisome extension of the documentation."
"The
Times is read by the people who run the country. The Daily Mirror
is read by people who think they run the country. The Guardian
is
read by people who think they ought to run the country. The Morning
Star is read by the people who think the country ought to be
run
by another country. The Independent is read by people who don't
know who runs the country but are sure they're doing it wrong.
The
Daily Mail is read by the wives of the people who run the country.
The Financial Times is read by the people who own the country.
The
Daily Express is read by the people who think the country ought
to be run as it used to be run. The Daily Telegraph is read by
the
people who still think it is their country. And the Sun's readers
don't care who runs the country providing she has big tits."
"It
is well for the readers to remember that the Foreign Office has
three national groups that it loves:
a)
The Arabs
b)
The Germans
c )
The Americans
And
three nationalities that it hates:
a)
The Russians
b)
The Israelis
c)
The French
It
hates the French most of all. This is why talking directly to the
French is regarded as prima facie an act of treason by the FO."
Yes
Prime Minister
,
Jonathan Lynn
Out
of Ireland we have come;
Great hatred, little room,
Maimed us at the start.
"Culture
and anarchy in Ireland, 1890-1939", FSL Lyons
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