B.H. Liddell Hart Quotes
Top 35 wise famous quotes and sayings by B.H. Liddell Hart
B.H. Liddell Hart Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from B.H. Liddell Hart on Wise Famous Quotes.
As has happened so often in history, victory had bred a complacency and fostered an orthodoxy which led to defeat in the next war.
The implied threat of using nuclear weapons to curb guerrillas was as absurd as to talk of using a sledge hammer to ward off a swarm of mosquitoes.
To foster the people's willing spirit is often as important as to possess the more concrete forms of power.
For Caesar met failure each time he relied on the direct, and retrieved it each time he resorted to the indirect.
The historian's rightful task is to distil experience as a medicinal warning for the future generations, not to distil a drug.
While hitting one must guard ... In order to hit with effect, the enemy must be taken off his guard.
The profoundest truth of war is that the issue of battle is usually decided in the minds of the opposing commanders, not in the bodies of their men.
Loss of hope rather than loss of life is what decides the issues of war. But helplessness induces hopelessness.
The practical value of history is to throw the film of the past through the material projector of the present on to the screen of the future.
Helplessness induces hopelessness, and history attests that loss of hope and not loss of lives is what decides the issue of war.
The effect to be sought is the dislocation of the opponent's mind and dispositions - such an effect is the true gauge of an indirect approach.
Inflict the least possible permanent injury, for the enemy of to-day is the customer of the morrow and the ally of the future
Loyalty is a noble quality, so long as it is not blind and does not exclude the higher loyalty to truth and decency.
The higher level of grand strategy [is] that of conducting war with a far-sighted regard to the state of the peace that will follow.
With growing experience, all skillful commanders sought to profit by the power of the defensive, even when on the offensive.
A modern state is such a complex and interdependent fabric that it offers a target highly sensitive to a sudden and overwhelming blow from the air.
The military weapon is but one of the means that serve the purposes of war: one out of the assortment which grand strategy can employ.
For the spread and endurance of an idea the originator is dependent on the self-development of the receivers and transmitters.
No man can exactly calculate the capacity of human genius and stupidity, nor the incapacity of will.
For whoever habitually suppresses the truth in the interests of tact will produce a deformity from the womb of his thought.