1987, Leonard I. Sweet, The Lion's Pride: America and the Peaceable Community, Abingdon Press (1987), →ISBN, page 38:
[…] the chief purpose of our armed forces would be not to "win wars" but to "avert wars," our leaders would be talking to us in "peacespeak," not "nukespeak," […]
1989, David Lyon, "Against The Stream", Third Way, Volume 12, Number 4, April 1989, page 17:
At the same time, we must not be uncritical of 'peacespeak' which sometimes glosses over the stark realities of painful choices in a fallen world.
1991, Robert B. Coote, In Defense of Revolution: The Elohist History, Ausburg Fortress (1991), →ISBN, page 58:
The court recorders of Solomon's peacespeak were unaware of the lives of villagers.
What is needed in replacement of "Warspeak" is not an equally crude and militant "Peacespeak", but judicious use of normal language, allowing for fine-grained selection and discrimination, for urbanity and finesse.
2001, Eamon Delaney, The Accidental Diplomat: My Years in the Irish Foreign Service, 1987-1995, New Island (2001), →ISBN, page 336:
But love-bombing, the Unionists couldn't handle. The long arm of 'friendship' is much more insidious. Irish nationalism takes many forms and peacespeak is just one of them.
Whenever he is with a visiting dignitary — Pakistan is a favoured destination for quite a few these days — the K word makes a conspicuous appearance in his peacespeak.
2004, Hans Pienaar, Ching Chong Che, Content Solutions (2004), →ISBN, page 37:
"Belligerents" as they are called in peacespeak, also discovered that one acquired new status by announcing one's vile deeds, or, more cautiously, the vile deeds of the neighbouring clan.