“No change (Marshall replacing former SecDef. Louis Johnson, who, soon after he resigned, was diagnosed with a fatal "brain malady") could have been more welcome to me. It brought only one embarrassment. The General (Marshall) insisted, overruling every protest of mine, in meticulously observing the protocol involved in my being the senior Cabinet officer. Never would he go through a door before me, or walk anywhere but on my left; he would go around an automobile to enter it after me and sit on the left; in meetings he would insist on my speaking before him. To be treated so by a revered and beloved former chief was a harrowing experience. But the result in government was, I think, unique in the history of the Republic. For the first time and perhaps, though I am not sure, the last, the Secretaries of State and Defense, with their top advisors, met with the Chiefs of Staff in their map room and discussed common problems together. At one of these meetings General Bradley and I made a treaty, thereafter scrupulously observed. The phrases 'from a military point of view' and 'from a political point of view' were excluded from our talks. No such dichotomy existed. Each of us had our tactical and strategic problems, but they were interconnected, not separate.”
Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department (1969), State Department Management, Leadership Perspectives
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Dean Acheson 49
Statesman and lawyer 1893–1971Related quotes

“Fang was going to kill me. And after I was dead, he would kill me again.”
Source: The Angel Experiment
KRDO http://www.krdo.com/Global/story.asp?S=8556903, accessed June 26, 2008

alleged in Mackris v. O'Reilly, quoted in * Every which way but loofah
Salon
2004-10-14
http://www.salon.com/news/2004/10/13/o_reilly
2011-06-02
Disputed

“My manager will send me anywhere he wants to, 'cause he doesn't have to fuckin' go.”
You Can't Fix Stupid
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 535.

Ich habe den Feldmarschall von Manstein gefragt, ob er an der Aktion gegen Hitler teilnehmen würde. Manstein sitzt in einem Sessel und liest in der Bibel. Schnell, fast verlegen, legt er sie zur Seite und deckt sie mit Papieren zu.
About Erich von Manstein, "Der Spiegel", nr. 14, p. 12, 2 April 1952, spiegel.de http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-21694964.html

Excerpt from "The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Keitel" - Page 52 - by Wilhelm Keitel - 1966