Geopolitical
in sentence
1226 examples of Geopolitical in a sentence
The
geopolitical
and environmental toll is likely to rise, imposing major costs on the region’s states and reshaping international maritime relations.
Both generally view China as having embarked on a probing strategy in search of weak spots where it can expand its
geopolitical
reach.
Moon will still pursue his dream, but he will do so prudently, and with an eye toward
geopolitical
realities.
Second, the crisis has several
geopolitical
ramifications.
And insofar as “benign neglect” might be a fair description, it is a positive one, characterized by the absence of
geopolitical
tension or instability in the region.
Not interested in
geopolitical
power – a legacy of its Nazi past – Germany was content to back France’s ambitions as long as the Common Market allowed it to be Europe’s economic powerhouse.
Fourth, the decline of reliance on military power to solve
geopolitical
problems is not a sign that wimps are in charge, but that adults are.
Fifth, the international system has been responding to
geopolitical
challenges more effectively than is generally acknowledged.
With Hamas allied to Iran and Syria, Fatah has seemed more attractive in
geopolitical
terms.
The Arabs’ march to freedom is bound to be a long and tortuous process – perhaps the main
geopolitical
test of the twenty-first century.
Whether or not they overtake the US, however, one thing is certain: China’s neighbor and regional
geopolitical
rival, India, will be lucky to win even a single medal.
Just as Hitler was driven by the desire to reverse the humiliating terms of the Treaty of Versailles, which ended WWI, Putin is focused on reversing the Soviet Union’s dismemberment, which he has called “the greatest
geopolitical
tragedy of the twentieth century.”
But there are
geopolitical
risks in this scramble for development.
Russia has an important place in Chinese
geopolitical
calculations, as a supplier of both modern weaponry and energy resources needed to continue its modernization.
Nor does it include Asia’s
geopolitical
risks arising from the territorial disputes between China and many of its neighbors, including Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, and Vietnam.
Despite the backsliding in Egypt and the intolerable violence in Syria, the region is evolving at its own pace in a complex, changing, and unstable
geopolitical
context.
Based on this history, it seems likely that Russia’s effort to contain perceived enemies will lead only to economic collapse and political disarray, forcing the country’s elites to step away from their
geopolitical
aspirations and turn to urgent domestic issues.
There is no immediate
geopolitical
threat in this situation.
Such a scenario would reverse the gloomy demographic and economic trends in Russia’s eastern territories, and would strengthen Russia’s
geopolitical
position in the process.
Finally, confidence-building does not happen in a vacuum, but within a specific regional and global
geopolitical
context.
But such measures will be effective only if the regional and global
geopolitical
environment supports the search for a resolution.
But, as in all of the post-Soviet conflicts, the search for a solution is not taking place in a favorable
geopolitical
climate.
Now, Pandora’s box has been opened, revealing an incredibly complex
geopolitical
puzzle.
If the journey to the crossroads is accelerated by a large
geopolitical
shock (originating in, say, the Middle East or North Korea) and/or a serious political breakdown in Europe (for example, a meltdown in Cyprus or prolonged political paralysis in Italy), the probability of taking the adverse path rises to an uncomfortably high level.
Given the ongoing
geopolitical
struggle between the US and the Soviet Union, it could not even quite be called a “world order.”
And it is also why the deep distrust between Russia and the US – which, despite its lost hegemony, remains an essential
geopolitical
actor – will have to be addressed.
Naturally, there may be a touch of
geopolitical
calculation about this.
In an increasingly dangerous
geopolitical
environment, the EU can no longer rely solely on soft power.
Instead, the major economies of the
geopolitical
West seem set to engage in a tit-for-tat tariff dispute that could escalate into a fill-blown trade war harming all of its members.
Russia’s current
geopolitical
neighborhood is far less tolerant of totalitarian ideologies than it was 90 years ago.
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