
We have made great progress, great progress particularly in this last year toward a goal that all Americans want, and that is peace in the whole world.
Topic · on the record
Every quote the archive has tagged peace.

We have made great progress, great progress particularly in this last year toward a goal that all Americans want, and that is peace in the whole world.

I pledge to you, we shall keep the United States in a position second to none in its national defense, because we know we will use it for peace.

Power in our hands means power for peace.

I am determined that we must build a world order in which differences between governments do not make it impossible for people to be friends.

This is not an agreement which guarantees that there will be no war.

Poland, along with other peoples in the world, wants peace, and that is our goal: to achieve a world of peace for all nations.

No nation that does not threaten its neighbors has anything to fear from the United States.

We must all stand together to eliminate its vicious threat from our public life; we must not permit the shadow of violence to fall over our country again.

Stronger international relationships based on mutual equity will do much to enhance world stability and thus will assist the world's constant search for new structures of peace.

The killing in this tragic war must stop.

Let us bring our men home from Vietnam; let us end the war in Vietnam.

Friendship between our two great peoples will mean a better chance for peace for all the world.

The ability of our two nations, Canada and the United States, to preserve the frontiers of friendship, to walk in the ways of freedom, and to pursue the works of peace provides example and encouragement to all who seek those same objectives, wherever they may live.

We have found a way to discuss our differences in a friendly way and without war, and this is the great lesson for all the world to see.

Insofar as that goal is concerned, we begin with one proposition, and that is that each nation of the world must renounce the use of force, the use of aggression against other nations.

We know, therefore, that when we talk, we begin with a devotion to the freedom of men, a devotion to economic progress in a climate of freedom, and a devotion to building a structure of peace in which all nations may have the right to their independence without infringement by other nations, great or small.

FELLOW Americans and peace-loving men and women everywhere today mount the death of one of the greatest architects of peace in our time: Dr. Ralph Bunche.