The majority of U.S. high school students don't know within 50 years when the Civil War occurred.
I think the majority of the British people are still sanguine about the need for war.
War is wretched beyond description, and only a fool or a fraud could sentimentalize its cruel reality.
There can be no compromise with war; it cannot be reformed or controlled; cannot be disciplined into decency or codified into common sense.
For as long as this nation has known war, we have embraced the heroes it has produced.
War zones are dangerous, protests can be violent, also, natural disasters are difficult to cover, so there are going to be risks.
It would be immoral to walk away from the consequences of our actions, leaving behind anarchy and civil war in Iraq.
Long live the liberation of the workers off all countries from the infernal chasm of war, exploitation and slavery!
War is not its own end, except in some catastrophic slide into absolute damnation.
We cannot win this war on terror if people are undercutting us. And one way to undercut us is to empower Iran.
War can really cause no economic boom, at least not directly, since an increase in wealth never does result from destruction of goods.
I was a soldier in WWII. The last couple of months of the war I was actually in combat.
The reality is the cap-and-trade legislation offered by the Democrats amounts to an economic declaration of war on the Midwest by liberals on Capitol Hill.
I am against preventive war because it means measures by the UN against us.
The challenge we have in the war on terrorism is looking around for those pieces that matter and trying to fit them together.
In general, I think, U.S. policies remain constant, going back to the Second World War. But the capacity to implement them is declining.
The American escalation of the war in Laos provoked a response by the Communist forces, which now control more of Laos than ever before.
There has been a huge attack against private sector unions. Actually, that's been going on since the Second World War.
After the Second World War, people in Japan no longer died for their country, and even that expression was no longer used.
We all know that in war the political and military factors have to complement each other.
I went to Vietnam; it was my first assignment as a reporter for the UPI, and I never could get away from the war.