| United States. Congress. Senate. Foreign Relations - 1968 - 58 páginas
...will, with one success requiring still another to insure the first one. An insistence on going all out to win a war may have a fine masculine ring, and a...with no one left capable of signaling the victory. It seems to me that he has put it extremely well. I will put the whole statement in the record as well... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1968 - 1322 páginas
...to 'defend freedom' may have a messianic sound that stirs our blood. But the ending: of an 'illout war in these times is beyond imagining. It may mean...military goals we need first of all to recognize that nn>st of the world's most basic woes does not lend themselves to purely military solutions. In our... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Foreign Relations - 1970 - 114 páginas
...public prints nowadays, I am moved to wonder if all our citizens have come to understand the concept »f limited war. A limited war is not merely a small war...with no one left capable of signaling the victory. individual freedom, solutions must be sought through combined political, economic, and military efforts."... | |
| Christopher M. Gacek - 1994 - 516 páginas
...the light of our national interest and our current capabilities. A war that is 'open-ended' ... is a war that may escalate itself indefinitely, as wars...with no one left capable of signaling the victory." (p. 245) 83. Taylor, The Uncertain Trumpet, pp. 14-15. 84. Harry G. Summers, On Strategy: The Vietnam... | |
| |