Aristotle Onassis
Strategic Concepts & Mechanics
Primary Evidence
"with a polite refusal. But Aristotle Onassis, as is his habit, was not deterred and persisted, neglecting no approach which offered even the faintest prospect of success. The first favorable response came from New York’s National City Bank, on whose president, Howard C. Sheperd, he brought his considerable powers of persuasion to bear, arguing that the funds he was seeking were for the purchase of per¬ fectly sound American ships which, moreover, the United States gov¬ ernment was anxious to sell. The negotiations were protracted and nerve-racking and went hand in hand with efforts to secure employment for the ships if and when they came into his possession. For months on end the days of Aristotle Onassis were taken up with meetings, consultations, calculations, as a constant procession of engineers, lawyers, bank officials, government agents filed past the persistent argonaut, or he past them. One little Greek was the pinpoint of a big deal linking an American finance institution with an American government agency, and it was a matter of tremendous satisfaction to him when, at long last, as he put it, he managed to start the ball rolling. The National City Bank succumbed to the blandishments of his reasoned plea, but the conditions were not what he had hoped for. The bank would advance only comparatively small amounts, no more than 50 percent of the purchase price of the ships. Repayment, instead of being spread over ten years, was to be within six to twelve months and guaranteed by employment of the ships which would be carrying mainly coal to France, Germany, and South America. What was ultimately at stake for Onassis was the ownership of a large fleet of ships which, even under such stringent financial condi¬ tions, would be paying for themselves within a few years. The sixteen Liberty vessels might take longer to earn their price than his Ariston, which had paid for herself in one year, but in the long run the fleet would be his and, free of mortgage, would long continue to earn him a substantial income."
"AS he was wont to do, Aristotle Onassis was sitting on the deck of the Christina staring out at the wide expanse of the sea. He liked the loneliness of the night when all was quiet and he could be alone with his thoughts for hours, sending them out, as it were, across the ocean and over the horizon like tentacles to bring back new ideas and solu¬ tions to old problems. The subject that agitated him at this turbulent"
"I have no friends and no enemies – only competitors. Aristotle Onassis"