Cooperation
in sentence
3172 examples of Cooperation in a sentence
Agreements on seemingly mundane subjects like agriculture, education, health, and even space exploration and energy security attest to enhanced
cooperation.
Until now, the region has been unable to institutionalize economic
cooperation
as vigorously as Europe and North America have.
That China is now acknowledged as a co-equal means that it will not stand in the way of further
cooperation.
Even in Europe, with its long history of cooperation, surveillance and conditionality are outsourced to the IMF.
Nonetheless, Iran has certainly made a promising new show of
cooperation
that, despite the risks, is worth pursuing.
Though US-China relations are highly complex, playing out according to a dynamic often characterized by competition and sometimes even confrontation, the two sides are no strangers to
cooperation
on matters of mutual self-interest – matters like curbing North Korea’s nuclear program.
It is time to apply the same commitment and
cooperation
to achieving a breakthrough on a feasible and viable way forward to end North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.
Applying the recent declaration on defense
cooperation
will not be easy.
As US-India defense
cooperation
broadens, this question will loom ever larger.
While strategic competition for resources will continue to shape Asia’s security dynamics, the associated risks can be moderated if Asia’s leaders establish norms and institutions aimed at building rule-based
cooperation.
Indeed, Asia is one of only two continents, along with Africa, where regional integration has yet to take hold, largely because political and cultural diversity, together with historical animosities, have hindered institution-building.Strained political relations among most of Asia’s sub-regions make a region-wide security structure or more effective resource
cooperation
difficult to achieve.
Whatever the reasons behind it, the policy change will remove a major irritant from bilateral relations and facilitate much closer political and strategic
cooperation
in the Indian Ocean.
This time we will need global
cooperation.
Until Russia becomes a magnet for US investment and a proper economic foundation is built to support this relationship, it will have to rest on two principal pillars: security
cooperation
and energy partnership.
This means that as technology, data, and data users and providers make rapid advances,
cooperation
among diverse actors – governments, national statistics offices, donor agencies, global and local NGOs, academic and research institutions, the private sector and others – will be needed.
In this spirit of cooperation, the major multilateral development institutions – the African Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the Islamic Development Bank, the United Nations, and the World Bank – have already begun to strengthen their joint efforts in producing and sharing development data.
Japan is doing so by deepening its strategic relations with Australia and India, and we are enhancing our
cooperation
with the ASEAN countries and the Republic of Korea.
These enhanced legislative foundations should make
cooperation
between the US military and Japan’s Self-Defense Forces even stronger, and the alliance still more solid, providing credible deterrence in the service of peace in the region.
Japan’s agenda is simple and straightforward: reform at home and proactive contributions to global peace based on the principle of international
cooperation.
In fact, it has offered several times to accept IAEA monitoring and has suggested that its civil nuclear program would be carried out with international
cooperation.
That same vision and foresight is needed today, and the European Union, with its unmatched ability to facilitate regional cooperation, will remain essential.
It would be ironic if Europeans, enthralled by illusory promises of blissful national self-containment, threw away 60 years of deep
cooperation
at a moment when such
cooperation
is needed more than ever.
The key for Europe will be to deliver a coherent and compelling vision that justifies our need for
cooperation
in the decades ahead.
The emperor’s visit to Vietnam – the first by a Japanese monarch – represents an important milestone in the maturing bilateral relationship, which has been buttressed not only by strong cultural links, but also by robust economic ties and growing strategic
cooperation.
Along with closer economic
cooperation
in recent years, Japan and Vietnam have been strengthening strategic ties.
Defense cooperation, in particular, has progressed considerably.
In 2011, Japan and Vietnam signed a Memorandum of Understanding to deepen defense ties, which now include exchanges of military delegations, naval goodwill visits, an annual defense-policy dialogue, and
cooperation
in military aviation and air defense.
During that visit, Japan and Vietnam agreed to expand defense
cooperation
into new areas, especially modernization of Vietnam’s maritime defense agencies and military technology.
Vietnam’s interest in defense
cooperation
with Japan dovetails with the Abe administration’s goal of “normalizing” Japan’s defense posture, in order to reduce the country’s dependence on the United States.
Now that US President Donald Trump’s administration is threatening to reduce military engagement with Asia, the need for strategic
cooperation
among regional actors is becoming even more acute.
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