Henry Kissinger Quotes

Henry Kissinger Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Henry Kissinger quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Henry Kissinger. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

No country can act wisely simultaneously in every part of the globe at every moment of time

By Henry Kissinger
No foreign policy-no matter how ingenious-has any chance of success if it is born in the minds of a few and carried in the hearts of none.

By Henry Kissinger
Ninety percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation.

By Henry Kissinger
Nixon had three goals to win by the biggest electoral landslide in history to be remembered as a peacemaker and to be accepted by the 'Establishment' as an equal. He achieved all these objectives at the end of 1972 and the beginning of 1973. And he lost them all two months later-partly because he turned a dream into an obsession.

By Henry Kissinger
Moderation is a virtue only in those who are thought to have an alternative

By Henry Kissinger
Moderation is a virtue only in those who are thought to have an alternative.

By Henry Kissinger
It was a Greek tragedy. Nixon was fulfilling his own nature. Once it started it could not end otherwise.

By Henry Kissinger
It is not a matter of what is true that counts, but a matter of what is perceived to be true

By Henry Kissinger
If you don't know where you are going, every road will get you nowhere.

By Henry Kissinger
If peace is equated simply with the absence of war, it can become abject pacifism that turns the world over to the most ruthless.

By Henry Kissinger
If the businessman would stop talking like a computer printout or a page from the corporate annual report, other people would stop thinking he had a cash register for a heart

By Henry Kissinger
If eighty percent of your sales come from twenty percent of all of your items, just carry those twenty percent

By Henry Kissinger
History knows no resting places and no plateaus.

By Henry Kissinger
Every civilization that has ever existed has ultimately collapsed.

By Henry Kissinger
Each success only buys an admission ticket to a more difficult problem.

By Henry Kissinger
Deep versed in books and shallow in himself

By Henry Kissinger
A crisis does not always appear to a policymaker as a series of dramatic events. Usually it imposes itself as an exhausting agenda of petty chores demanding both concentration and endurance.

By Henry Kissinger
Power is the great aphrodisiac.

By Henry Kissinger
Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac.

By Henry Kissinger
The superpowers often behave like two heavily armed blind men feeling their way around a room, each believing himself in mortal peril from the other, whom he assumes to have perfect vision.

By Henry Kissinger
The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.

By Henry Kissinger