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Politics & Power Quote by Douglas MacArthur

"I am concerned for the security of our great Nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within"

About this Quote

MacArthur is doing something rhetorically potent here: he demotes the glamorous enemy at the gates and elevates the quieter menace of internal decay. “Our great Nation” sets a patriotic baseline, but the real work happens in the pivot: “not so much… but because.” External threats are framed as almost conventional, even manageable. The danger he wants you to feel is “insidious” - a word that implies stealth, infection, and betrayal, not tanks and uniforms. It’s a shift from battlefield courage to civic vigilance, from defeating an opponent to policing a mood.

The intent is less a strategic briefing than a permission structure for suspicion. By pointing inward, MacArthur activates a particular American anxiety: that the republic can be undone not by superior force but by compromised loyalty, ideological drift, or elite incompetence. “Forces working from within” is deliberately elastic. It can mean communist infiltration, labor unrest, bureaucratic overreach, media influence, or moral decline. That vagueness is the point; it invites audiences to pour their own fears into the phrase while aligning themselves with the speaker as guardian.

Context sharpens the edge. MacArthur’s career spanned world wars and the early Cold War, when “internal security” became a dominant political language and dissent was often treated as a national vulnerability. Coming from a soldier, the line also smuggles military authority into domestic judgment: the general’s credibility in external war is leveraged to define the internal enemy. It’s a warning, but also a claim to interpret the nation’s soul - and to decide who counts as a threat.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Later attribution: The Jackson MacKenzie Chronicles: Enter the Shadow (Angel Giacomo) modern compilationID: RJCnEAAAQBAJ
Text match: 98.57%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Douglas MacArthur " I am concerned for the security of our great Nation ; not so much because of any threat from without , but because of the insidious forces working from within . " – General Douglas MacArthur " The soldier , above ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
MacArthur, Douglas. (2026, February 26). I am concerned for the security of our great Nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-concerned-for-the-security-of-our-great-30881/

Chicago Style
MacArthur, Douglas. "I am concerned for the security of our great Nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within." FixQuotes. February 26, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-concerned-for-the-security-of-our-great-30881/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I am concerned for the security of our great Nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within." FixQuotes, 26 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-concerned-for-the-security-of-our-great-30881/. Accessed 29 Mar. 2026.

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Douglas MacArthur

Douglas MacArthur (January 26, 1880 - April 5, 1964) was a Soldier from USA.

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