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253 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1959

The point I make is simply that cruelty and hate and intolerance are the monopoly of no particular race or creed or time.
What I say applies to the Russians even more than the western world, but I think the first move must come from the western world - a maturer people a more politically advanced people - and not nearly so afraid of the Russians as the Russians are of them... It is essential, I think, to hammer home the idea of peace, the idea of disarmament, to convince the Russians, above all things, of our peaceful intentions. Peaceful intentions! The British and the Americans filling the armouries of the nations of Western Europe with hydrogen bombs - what a way to demonstrate peaceful intentions, what a way rather to ensure that Russia will never relax its grip on the satellites it no longer wants, what a way to drive the men of the Kremlin, scared men, I tell you, inexorably nearer the last thing in the world they want to do - sending the first intercontinental missile on its way: the last thing they want to do, the last act of panic or desperation, because they know better than any that, though in their deep cellars in Moscow they may survive the retaliation that will surely come, they will never survive the vengeful fury of the crazed survivors of the holocaust that will just as surely engulf their own nation. To arm Europe is to provoke the Russians to the point of madness.