"The idea that a war can be won by standing on the defensive and waiting for the enemy to attack is a dangerous fallacy, which owes its inception to the desire to evade the price of victory"
About this Quote
Haig’s line is a blunt warning disguised as a moral scolding: defense-only strategy isn’t merely ineffective, it’s a psychological alibi. He calls it a “dangerous fallacy” not because trenches can’t hold ground, but because the posture of waiting flatters leaders and publics who want the benefits of war without its bill. The sentence is engineered to corner the reader. “Standing on the defensive” sounds prudent, even humane; Haig flips it into evasion, a refusal to pay “the price of victory.” The real target isn’t the enemy. It’s the domestic temptation to pretend there’s a clean, low-cost path to winning.
Context sharpens the edge. Haig’s career is inseparable from World War I’s industrial slaughter and the strategic debate over attrition, offense, and the promise of breakthrough. In that world, “defensive” could mean paralysis: ceding initiative, letting the opponent choose time and place, and bleeding slowly under artillery and blockade. His phrasing also reveals how commanders justified relentless offensives: if victory has a price, then casualties become not a failure of imagination but the toll of seriousness.
The subtext is political as much as tactical. Haig is arguing against half-measures, against cabinet timidity, against publics seduced by the notion that fortitude alone can substitute for action. Yet the sentence carries its own risk: it moralizes strategy. Once victory is framed as something you “pay for,” dissent can be recast as cowardice, and caution as weakness. That’s why it works - and why it’s unsettling. It turns a military debate into a test of national will, then dares you to flinch.
Context sharpens the edge. Haig’s career is inseparable from World War I’s industrial slaughter and the strategic debate over attrition, offense, and the promise of breakthrough. In that world, “defensive” could mean paralysis: ceding initiative, letting the opponent choose time and place, and bleeding slowly under artillery and blockade. His phrasing also reveals how commanders justified relentless offensives: if victory has a price, then casualties become not a failure of imagination but the toll of seriousness.
The subtext is political as much as tactical. Haig is arguing against half-measures, against cabinet timidity, against publics seduced by the notion that fortitude alone can substitute for action. Yet the sentence carries its own risk: it moralizes strategy. Once victory is framed as something you “pay for,” dissent can be recast as cowardice, and caution as weakness. That’s why it works - and why it’s unsettling. It turns a military debate into a test of national will, then dares you to flinch.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Douglas
Add to List









