Administration
in sentence
4645 examples of Administration in a sentence
Second, the “Chapter 19” dispute-settlement mechanism that the Trump
administration
wanted to kill has been retained, albeit in a watered-down form.
This is evident in the fact that the Trump administration’s main selling point for the deal is a concession by Canada to open about 3.6% of its $16.3 billion dairy market to more US exports.
But, notwithstanding Obama’s Euro-enthusiasm, valid questions remain concerning his administration’s foreign policy.
At the outset of his first administration, Obama spoke of the need “for a global response to global challenges,” which was followed by a move toward multilateral engagement, most notably in Libya.
But his administration’s persistent failure to address the crisis in Syria effectively, along with its backseat approach in Mali, suggests that such concerted multilateralism was an exception.
Given the rapidly approaching 2015 deadline to negotiate a new binding international agreement on climate change under the Durban Platform, a US
administration
that supports institutional solutions to global problems is vital.
Slaughter had served in a Republican administration, under President George W. Bush.
Few Americans will take seriously the assertion that President George W. Bush and other members of his
administration
– including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and John Bolton, recently appointed by President Donald Trump as his next National Security Adviser – are war criminals.
He abused intelligence analysts who disagreed with the line the Bush
administration
wished them to support.
John Prados, a fellow at George Washington University’s National Security Archives, has commented that: “Analysts working on Iraq intelligence could not be blamed for concluding that their own careers might be in jeopardy if they supplied answers other than what the Bush
administration
wanted to hear.”
The Bush
administration
invoked false and misleading evidence, most notably forged documents purporting to show that Iraq had sought to buy uranium from Niger, to justify its predetermined decision to invade oil-rich Iraq.
It is unlikely that Bush, or any member of his administration, will ever stand trial for the crime of initiating a war of aggression.
Although President Bill Clinton signed the treaty establishing the ICC, the Bush
administration
withdrew that signature, and the US is still not a party to the treaty.
But the expectations of George W. Bush’s
administration
were very different from Putin’s.
Instead, Russia had to deal with the Iraq war, NATO enlargement to the Baltic states, pro-Western revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia, and the Bush administration’s “Freedom Agenda” aimed at global democratization.
The Obama administration’s reset – the fourth since the Soviet collapse – was the most successful, at least during the president’s first term in office.
But imagine the outrage with which Trump’s supporters would greet a “taxpayer bailout” of a foreign country or Mexican officials’ anger over having to secure assistance from the same Trump
administration
responsible for their country’s ills.
Trump can’t be pleased that the Obama
administration
rushed to push through the reappointment of its chosen World Bank president, Jim Yong Kim.
Yet Sanders has indicated that he would even prohibit anyone with past experience on Wall Street from serving in his
administration.
Clinton’s proposed risk fee resembles one advanced by President Barack Obama’s
administration
in 2010 in order to discourage risky activity by the largest banks, while helping to recoup some revenue from bailouts.
The European Union and American economists in the Clinton
administration
argued for passage of the Kyoto Treaty only by creating models for something that wasn’t the Kyoto Treaty.
But our chances of ensuring a more sustainable world would be higher if we had not allowed ourselves to be blinded for the past decade by the combination of the public-relations stunt known as the Kyoto Treaty and the idiocy-as-usual known as the Bush
administration.
Much of the early focus of the Obama
administration
will undoubtedly be on the economy and the war in Iraq.
But it is critically important that the new
administration
pay serious attention to other foreign-policy issues right from the start.
Not long after President George W. Bush came into office, his
administration
took a hard-line stance against the North Korean regime, calling for a review of the Clinton administration’s policy, and eventually tagging North Korea as a member of the “axis of evil.”
After all, North Korea’s reaction to the Bush administration’s policies was to drop out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, restart its nuclear program, and further develop its weapons production.
It is only more recently, under the watch of US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, that the Bush administration’s policy toward North Korea has become more pragmatic.
After North Korea threatened to restart its nuclear facility at Yongbyon, the Bush
administration
in early October removed the country from its terrorism blacklist.
As Obama’s new
administration
takes over, the choice is between making some progress, as has occurred in recent years, and facing a nuclear North Korea.
In November we were asked to approve – without review – huge overpayments on
administration.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
Policy
Government
Trade
Their
About
Could
Economic
Other
After
Should
Countries
Public
Policies
Years
Under
There
Against
While