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Daily Inspiration Quote by Margaret Thatcher

"A world without nuclear weapons would be less stable and more dangerous for all of us"

About this Quote

Thatcher’s line lands like a paradox with a purpose: safety, she argues, depends on the very devices designed for annihilation. As a Cold War leader, she’s not flirting with abstraction; she’s issuing a governing premise. The intent is to legitimize deterrence and, by extension, Britain’s continued nuclear posture at a moment when disarmament rhetoric could sound morally irresistible. She reframes that moral pull as strategic naivete.

The subtext is a hard-nosed anthropology. Remove nuclear weapons and you don’t remove conflict; you merely change its calculus. In Thatcher’s worldview, great-power rivalry is permanent, and power abhors a vacuum. Nukes, then, become a grim accounting tool: they raise the price of war high enough to deter even ambitious states. That’s why the sentence is constructed in comparative terms - “less stable,” “more dangerous” - a technocratic cadence that presents catastrophe management as common sense rather than ideology.

Context matters: late-20th-century Europe lived under the shadow of U.S.-Soviet confrontation, with Britain positioned as both dependent on and influential within the American security umbrella. Thatcher was also speaking to allies and adversaries at once. To allies, it’s reassurance that London won’t unilaterally disarm and weaken NATO’s credibility. To adversaries, it’s a signal of resolve: Britain’s deterrent is not a bargaining chip but a stabilizing fact.

The rhetorical power comes from its inversion. It forces listeners to accept an unsettling bargain - that peace is maintained not by purity, but by fear calibrated into policy.

Quote Details

TopicWar
Source
Verified source: Speech at Soviet Official Banquet (Margaret Thatcher, 1987)
Text match: 95.63%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Without far greater trust and confidence between East and West than exists at present, a world without nuclear weapons would be less stable and more dangerous for all of us.. This line appears in Margaret Thatcher’s remarks at a Soviet official banquet at the Kremlin (venue listed on the primary-source transcript as St George’s Halls, The Kremlin) on March 30, 1987. The commonly-circulated shorter quote (“A world without nuclear weapons would be less stable…”) is a clipped excerpt; in the primary text it is preceded by: “A world without nuclear weapons may be a dream but you cannot base a sure defence on dreams.” The Margaret Thatcher Foundation entry identifies its source as a transcript from the Thatcher MSS (Churchill Archive Centre) and provides the full speech text online; it does not provide a printed page number.
Other candidates (1)
Did Anything Good Come Out of the Cold War? (Paul Mason, 2015) compilation95.0%
... A WORLD WITHOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS WOULD BE LESS STABLE AND MORE DANGEROUS FOR ALL OF US . " Margaret Thatcher , Bri...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Thatcher, Margaret. (2026, February 16). A world without nuclear weapons would be less stable and more dangerous for all of us. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-world-without-nuclear-weapons-would-be-less-25717/

Chicago Style
Thatcher, Margaret. "A world without nuclear weapons would be less stable and more dangerous for all of us." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-world-without-nuclear-weapons-would-be-less-25717/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A world without nuclear weapons would be less stable and more dangerous for all of us." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-world-without-nuclear-weapons-would-be-less-25717/. Accessed 5 Mar. 2026.

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Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Thatcher (October 13, 1925 - April 8, 2013) was a Leader from United Kingdom.

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