Established
in sentence
2559 examples of Established in a sentence
In the wake of World War II, a stronger and more influential institution – the United Nations – was
established.
Earlier this year, Lee, at the last minute, canceled the scheduled signing of the “General Security of Military Information Agreement” with Japan, which would have
established
military intelligence-sharing between the two countries, both US allies, for the first time.
Established
in June 2001, the SCO includes China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
But if either were to leave, customs checkpoints would have to be
established
at all major border crossings, with potentially dangerous implications for the Good Friday Agreement, which restored peace in Northern Ireland a generation ago.
Trump has made it obvious that
established
partnerships, alliances, rules, and protocols mean little to him.
But he argues that it will not be established, because there is no appetite for it.
This is stoking fears among Turkey’s leaders that a Kurdish state could be
established
on their country’s southern doorstep, providing a safe haven for the PKK and exacerbating separatist pressures among Turkey’s 13 million Kurds.
What is not so easy is to duplicate Bitcoin’s
established
lead in credibility and the large ecosystem of applications that have built up around it.
Only time will tell whether these countries will successfully challenge the
established
powers.
In the United States, “organic” has a precise meaning
established
by the US Department of Agriculture.
Without the single market, all member states would be less attractive to foreign investors, who, once
established
in one member state, can move freely around the EU.
These believers are now operating, the statement continues, under the banner of the Islamic State, which currently controls the territory between Aleppo in Syria and Diyala in Iraq, where it has already
established
the structures of a proto-state: courts, a tax system, and security and social services.
Even as the UK faces the upheaval of Brexit, nobody is talking about remaking – much less replacing – the
established
political parties.
Now is the moment for a new party, styled after French President Emmanuel Macron’s “La République En Marche,” to capitalize on the division, disarray, and distrust in the
established
parties.
Of course, as Blair suggested, Britain’s first-past-the-post electoral system, based on single-member constituencies, implies huge advantages for the
established
political parties.
Since the National Unity Government, with Ashraf Ghani as President and Abdullah Abdullah as Cheif Executive, was
established
in 2014, the flow of aid to Afghanistan has declined sharply.
The World Bank was
established
in 1944 to promote economic development, and virtually every country is now a member.
This is not to say that the US should never support insurgencies against
established
governments; but doing so is almost always a lonely affair, without any realistic expectation of enlisting many partners in the process.
Trying to win “hearts and minds” with Western goods simply corrupts, and thus discredits, the governments
established
by those intervening.
A pioneering social-networking platform called Tawasul (“Connection”),
established
by the IRC and the non-profit news organization Internews, has been set up to help refugees help one another through the exchange of information and advice.
The reality is that a European political union is unlikely to be
established
anytime soon.
Had such a mechanism been established, the worst events in Ukraine could have been averted.
In each case, careful examination of the data
established
that the gloomy scenarios prevailing at the time were exaggerated.
Some analysts believe this fourth phase marks the beginning of a conflict in which an
established
hegemon goes to war with a rising challenger.
In this respect, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC),
established
by the United States government, has a unique opportunity.
But, when it comes to standards – such as those governing safety, health, and the environment – the market-access requirements are brutal and binary: either you meet the
established
standard or you do not sell.
As a result, third-country firms’ options will depend on how TTIP standards are established: through harmonization (adoption of a common standard) or mutual recognition (acceptance of goods that meet one another’s
established
standards).
This is akin to a WTO test for departures from
established
international standards.
But in Copenhagen, the structure
established
by the Lisbon Treaty failed.
We propose that a similar process be
established
for research ethics committees considering work with human embryos.
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