“In fact, as we shall see in the next section, most attempts to explicitly measure military power are mere tabulations of forces of various sorts: the numbers of men underarms, the number of weapons of a given type, etc. This is in itself an evasion of the problem since it says nothing about the actual capabilities of the forces of one country to deal with another.”
Problems of Estimating Military Power (August 1966)
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Andrew Marshall 5
the director of the United States Department of Defense's O… 1921–2019Related quotes

The Manchester Guardian (28 May 1934), quoted in Hugh Dalton, The Fateful Years. Memoirs 1931-1945 (London: Frederick Muller Ltd, 1957), p. 150.

Source: Principles of industrial organization, 1913, p. 41-42
A Short History of Chemistry (1937)
Context: A great number of our common ideas and ways of looking at the world were really shaped for us by the Greeks of antiquity, and... incorporated into the scientific knowledge of today. Such ideas as those of matter, force, element, number, space, time, etc., came to us from the ancient Greeks.

Footnote: The apparent advantage of the generality of this definition of number disappears as soon as we consider complex numbers. According to my view, on the other hand, the notion of the ratio between two numbers of the same kind can be clearly developed only after the introduction of irrational numbers.
Stetigkeit und irrationale Zahlen (1872)
Source: Total Espionage: Germany’s Information and Disinformation Apparatus 1932-41 (1941), p. 7

1990s, A Distinctly American Internationalism (November 1999)

2000s, Speech at the Four Seasons, New York (25 September 2008)