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Anthony Eden Quotes

English soldier and politician, Birth: 12-6-1897, Death: 14-1-1977 Anthony Eden Quotes
1.
We are not at war with Egypt. We are in an armed conflict.
Anthony Eden

2.
If you've broken the eggs, you should make the omelette.
Anthony Eden

3.
I am one of a rare breed of true politicians who definitely say what they may or may not mean with absolute certainty.
Anthony Eden

4.
You may gain temporary appeasement by a policy of concession to violence, but you do not gain lasting peace that way.
Anthony Eden

5.
There is now doubt in our minds that Nasser, whether he likes it or not, is now effectively in Russian hands, just as Mussolini was in Hitler's. It would be as ineffective to show weakness to Nasser now in order to placate him as it was to show weakness to Mussolini.
Anthony Eden

Similar Authors: Barack Obama Thomas Jefferson Hillary Clinton George W. Bush Winston Churchill Abraham Lincoln Ronald Reagan Francois de La Rochefoucauld Horace Theodore Roosevelt John F. Kennedy Zig Ziglar Vladimir Putin Bernie Sanders Adolf Hitler
6.
Our quarrel is not with Egypt, still less with the Arab world. It is with Colonel Nasser. He has shown that he is not a man who can be trusted to keep an agreement. Now he has torn up all his country's promises to the Suez Canal Company and has even gone back on his own statements.
Anthony Eden

7.
The more the planners, the worse the plans.
Anthony Eden

8.
Nothing is more destructive of human dignity than a rule which imposes a mute and blind obedience.
Anthony Eden

Quote Topics by Anthony Eden: Country Long Men Egypt Political Mean War Succeed Europe May Conflict Father Reality Real Planners Plunder Discovery Fighting Planning Able Luck Car Hands Power Freedom Russia Work Peace Government Iran
9.
Every succeeding scientific discovery makes greater nonsense of old-time conceptions of sovereignty.
Anthony Eden

10.
Anthony's father was a mad baronet and his mother a very beautiful woman. That's Anthony-half mad baronet, half beautiful woman.
Anthony Eden

11.
Man should be master of his environment, not its slave. That is what freedom means.
Anthony Eden

12.
Eden ha[s] put his country in a position where she sustained the greatest diplomatic reverse since Bismarck in similar circumstances had called Palmerston's bluff in the matter of Schleswig-Holstein...Further damage was done when Russia proved by her action in Spain, that she was not a good European as Mr. Eden had assured the world was the case.
Anthony Eden

13.
Everyone is always in favour of general economy and particular expenditure.
Anthony Eden

14.
If we had allowed things to drift, everything would have gone from bad to worse. Nasser would have become a kind of Moslem Mussolini, and our friends in Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and even Iran would gradually have been brought down. His efforts would have spread westwards, and Libya and North Africa would have been brought under his control.
Anthony Eden

15.
No democratic world will work as it should work until we recognize that we can only enjoy any right so long as we are prepared to discharge its equivalent duty. This applies just as much to states in their dealing with one another as to individuals within the states.
Anthony Eden

16.
We cannot agree that an act of plunder which threatens the livelihood of many nations should be allowed to succeed.
Anthony Eden

17.
Slowly and painfully man is learning that he must do unto others what he would have them do to him.
Anthony Eden

18.
The free world has need that its foreign policies should fairly measure the realities of the world in which we live. There are certain principles to which we hold: the sanctity of treaties, good faith between nations, the interdependence of peoples from which no country, however powerful, can altogether escape.
Anthony Eden

19.
Corruption never has been compulsory.
Anthony Eden

20.
Long experience has told me that to be criticized is not always to be wrong.
Anthony Eden

21.
We best avoid wars by taking even physical action to stop small ones.
Anthony Eden

22.
It is a common happening that those in power, as their tenure of office continues, find themselves less and less able to contemplate relinquishing it.
Anthony Eden

23.
The worst of being sacked is you can never find your car.
Anthony Eden

24.
Although [in 1937] we might still hope to prevent the divisions of Europe into Fascist and anti-Fascist camps, our real affinities and interests, strategic as well as political, lay with France, a fact which some of my colleagues were most reluctant to realise.
Anthony Eden

25.
We have many times led Europe in the fight for freedom. It would be an ignoble end to our long history if we tamely accepted to perish by degrees.
Anthony Eden

26.
All prejudices are equally fatal to good government.
Anthony Eden

27.
Drift is the demon of democracy.
Anthony Eden

28.
Responding to the question "If Mr. Stalin dies, what will be the effect on international affairs?" That is a good question for you to ask, not a wise question for me to answer.
Anthony Eden