Skip to main content

War & Peace Quote by A. J. P. Taylor

"No war is inevitable until it breaks out"

About this Quote

Fatalism is a comfort food for policymakers: it dissolves culpability in a warm bath of “forces” and “history.” A. J. P. Taylor’s line cuts straight through that alibi. “No war is inevitable until it breaks out” is deliberately cheeky, almost tautological, but the tautology is the point. He’s mocking the way governments and commentators retroactively narrate catastrophe as destiny, smoothing messy decisions into a clean, cinematic arc.

As a historian, Taylor is picking a fight with the grand theories that treat wars as mechanical outcomes of alliances, arms races, or national “character.” The subtext is procedural and prosecutorial: if nothing is inevitable beforehand, then every step toward war contains alternatives, misreadings, bargains rejected, off-ramps ignored. The sentence quietly drags agency back into the room. It insists that leaders are not passengers of “the tide of events”; they’re drivers who can choose to brake, swerve, or accelerate.

Context matters. Taylor’s mid-20th-century work, especially his revisionist take on the origins of World War II, challenged the moral clarity of neat causation. He didn’t deny aggression or ideology; he distrusted monocausal stories that let institutions and statesmen off the hook. The phrase also captures a cold truth about contingency: war often arrives through accumulation, not a single thunderclap. Until the shooting starts, diplomacy still exists, miscalculations can be corrected, and domestic politics can shift.

The sting is in the last clause. Once war “breaks out,” inevitability is manufactured after the fact - not by fate, but by the irreversible logic of violence.

Quote Details

TopicWar
Source
Verified source: The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1918 (A. J. P. Taylor, 1954)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
No war is inevitable until it breaks out (Chapter 22 (page number not verified from a primary scan)). The earliest traceable attribution in non-quote-compilation references points to A. J. P. Taylor’s 1954 book The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1918 (Clarendon Press). Multiple secondary references (e.g., Wikipedia’s article on the book, and independent quotation curations that cite the same work) tie the line to this title and specifically to Chapter 22. However, I could not access a verifiable page image/snippet from the 1954 edition (or an authorized scan) within this search session to confirm the exact page number or to prove it is the *first-ever* appearance (as opposed to an earlier lecture/article by Taylor using the same wording).
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Taylor, A. J. P. (2026, March 2). No war is inevitable until it breaks out. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-war-is-inevitable-until-it-breaks-out-4394/

Chicago Style
Taylor, A. J. P. "No war is inevitable until it breaks out." FixQuotes. March 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-war-is-inevitable-until-it-breaks-out-4394/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"No war is inevitable until it breaks out." FixQuotes, 2 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-war-is-inevitable-until-it-breaks-out-4394/. Accessed 9 Mar. 2026.

More Quotes by J. P. Taylor Add to List
No War Is Inevitable Until It Breaks Out - A. J. P. Taylor
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

A. J. P. Taylor

A. J. P. Taylor (March 25, 1906 - September 7, 1990) was a Historian from United Kingdom.

14 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

John Abbott, Statesman
Pope John Paul II, Clergyman
Pope John Paul II
Yoko Ono, Artist
Yoko Ono
William P. Bundy, Historian
A. J. P. Taylor, Historian
A. J. P. Taylor