Skip to main content

Daily Inspiration Quote by Lawrence Eagleburger

"The consequence of a world full of nuclear powers to me is so incomprehensible in terms of the dangers that that implies"

About this Quote

“Incomprehensible” is a diplomat’s way of dropping the polite mask without quite throwing it across the room. Lawrence Eagleburger isn’t claiming he can’t do the math on deterrence; he’s pointing to something more damning: the sheer unpredictability of a future where nuclear weapons stop being an exceptional horror and become a widely held instrument of statecraft. The line works because it refuses the comforting, technocratic frame that dominated Cold War nuclear talk - the notion that arsenals can be managed like balance sheets, risks quantified, stability engineered.

As a career operator in the national-security machinery, Eagleburger’s choice to describe the danger as beyond comprehension reads as both warning and accusation. Warning, because proliferation multiplies not just warheads but variables: miscalculation, command-and-control failures, coups, false alarms, opportunistic doctrines, regional rivalries that don’t share Washington and Moscow’s bitter “rules of the game.” Accusation, because it implies that the policy world’s usual confidence - treaties, inspections, hotline diplomacy - has limits once the club becomes a crowd.

The context is late-20th-century realism colliding with post-Cold War drift: the Soviet collapse didn’t end nuclear risk, it redistributed it. Eagleburger’s unease anticipates the 1990s and 2000s proliferation anxieties (South Asia’s tests, North Korea’s program, fears around loose materials) and today’s multipolar nuclear landscape. The sentence’s power lies in its restraint: by not specifying the catastrophe, it lets the listener supply it, which is precisely what makes the threat feel uncontainable.

Quote Details

TopicWar
SourceHelp us find the source
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Eagleburger, Lawrence. (2026, January 14). The consequence of a world full of nuclear powers to me is so incomprehensible in terms of the dangers that that implies. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-consequence-of-a-world-full-of-nuclear-powers-6006/

Chicago Style
Eagleburger, Lawrence. "The consequence of a world full of nuclear powers to me is so incomprehensible in terms of the dangers that that implies." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-consequence-of-a-world-full-of-nuclear-powers-6006/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The consequence of a world full of nuclear powers to me is so incomprehensible in terms of the dangers that that implies." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-consequence-of-a-world-full-of-nuclear-powers-6006/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Lawrence Add to List
Lawrence Eagleburger on nuclear proliferation danger
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

USA Flag

Lawrence Eagleburger (August 1, 1930 - June 4, 2011) was a Diplomat from USA.

28 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes