Believes
in sentence
1033 examples of Believes in a sentence
His daughter dates an African-American, and, to his credit, he
believes
in racial reconciliation.
However, anyone who
believes
that the courtroom drama in the provincial capital of Jinan will determine the trial’s outcome (the verdict and sentence will be announced in September) is seriously mistaken.
In 2002, China and ASEAN agreed on a legally non-binding code of conduct for managing such disputes, but, as a large power, China
believes
that it will gain more in bilateral rather than multilateral negotiations with small countries.
To be sure, nobody
believes
that many decades’ worth of mistrust and resentment can be overcome in an instant.
One answer is that the Trump administration probably
believes
that informing Congress would make the secret negotiations no longer a secret.
Whatever route is taken, the great question today concerns the enigma that is Bibi Netanyahu, a would-be Churchill who
believes
that his mission is to thwart the designs of Iran’s evil new Shia empire, something which requires the goodwill of the international community, particularly of the Obama administration.
No one
believes
that such an edifice can be detached from the government, or that he will abstain from taking part in his wife’s decisions as president.
Néstor will not publicly express any attitude that hints at shared government, but nobody
believes
that he will be far from the scene.
The Trump administration
believes
that it has the bargaining tools to recalibrate the relationship to America’s advantage, including a tariff on Chinese imports or even selectively defaulting on the more than $1 trillion the US owes to China.
Not even Trump
believes
his own act.
He
believes
that he possesses the right to intervene in his neighbors’ affairs, because, as he put it, “the Soviet Union was the same Russia, just called by another name.”
He embraces the logic of reforms that are possible within a multi-party democracy, and he
believes
in the critical role that dialogue and compromise play in the pursuit of genuine progress.
Globally, Rudd
believes
that the joint agenda could focus on combating climate change, revitalizing the G-20, further internationalizing the renminbi; giving China a greater role in the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank; and reforming other key international institutions within the UN system.
The United States allocates less than 1% of the federal budget to aid, but the average American
believes
this figure to be thirty-one-times higher.
In practice, this system will allow any domestic producer to block duty-free imports of steel components that it
believes
it can produce.
Mousavi, who
believes
that Iran is in “poor shape,” is perceived by many of the Iranian elite to possess the revolutionary and ideological credentials to run against Islamist fundamentalists such as Ahmadinejad.
A small number of Black Swans, Taleb believes, “explain almost everything in our world.”
But he also
believes
that private-property rights come second to the needs of the Russian “security state,” which means that ownership is always conditional.
As befits a former KGB officer, Putin also
believes
that the Russian state has “ultimate ownership rights” to its citizens’ private assets not just in Russia, but also abroad.
But are the incompetents – say, the average person who
believes
that buying cheap imports from China destroys Western jobs – always wrong?
Like Dayan before him, Barak
believes
that Israel, a “villa in the jungle,” is forced to go to war every few years to consolidate its deterrence in an unmerciful Middle East neighborhood, where “there is no pity for the weak, nor a second chance for the defeated.”
Even before a single note has been played in the “awareness-raising” concerts, much of the developed world
believes
that global warming is the planet’s biggest problem.
Trump
believes
that, by withdrawing from the JCPOA, he can pressure Iran to agree to a new, more comprehensive deal that would cover not just the country’s nuclear program, but also its ballistic missile tests, provocative regional behavior, and human-rights violations.
The problem is that no one
believes
it.
Contrary to what Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu believes, the main existential threat facing the country is not a nuclear-armed Iran.
In many developed countries, for example, the public
believes
that there are three times as many immigrants residing in their country as there really are.
The average Briton
believes
that 34% of UK residents are foreigners; the true number is just 11%.
The average Swede, for example,
believes
that 18% of the country’s population is composed of migrants; the actual number is close to 13%.
A long-time advocate of a softer line, he acknowledges the North Korean threat, but
believes
that the South has time to seek a solution by reviving economic ties and dialogue.
More fundamentally, Moon
believes
that the US has steered the alliance’s North Korea strategy off course.
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