Hostages
in sentence
104 examples of Hostages in a sentence
The way to play is here: you choose the weapons, the equipments and the men, you can made a plan, and you got to accomplish mission, such as defuse bombs, rescue and escort hostages... you CAN KILL TERRORISTS, OF COURSE, BUT THEY ALSO CAN KILL YOU, OR YOUR TEAM MEMBERS, OR THE HOSTAGES, so you must TOOK CARE... when the character that you're using dies, you get the control of another team member since they're all gone (you loose) or the mission is accomplished (you win), but you also loose if
hostages
are killed, or the bomb explodes, it depends from the mission.
It doesn't help that the
hostages
he takes are extremely, extremely dull and mechanically written.
The Chief Minister of Maharashtra doesn't show any consideration about the
hostages
and giving 'Rachit' and 'Rahul' a chance to complete the mission.
Of course, the president does not get captured, but instead eludes the terrorist and complicates matters for them as he frees some of the
hostages
and instead of leaving himself stays to get his family back.
The formula, of course, is
hostages
held in terror by gunmen with Sinatra as their leader.
And we are also meant to believe that the US Government would recruit this same basketball coach (and his friendly Lebanese taxi driver!!!) in an operation to rescue American
hostages
- a four man operation against hundreds of armed-to-the-teeth terrorists.
Hostages
are left to wander all over the place.
Obama’s Cuban BreakthroughMADRID – Too frequently, leaders become hostages, rather than shapers, of their sociopolitical environment.
The EU needs to tell Iran that unless it releases the British
hostages
and moderates its nuclear ambitions, it will receive no export guarantees.
Dictators who demand amnesty as a condition for leaving power are somewhat like airplane highjackers who insist on freedom for themselves and imprisoned comrades as the price for releasing
hostages.
The flip side of this coin was that they became
hostages
to Bundesbank's monetary policies.
Their governments saw themselves as Qaddafi’s
hostages.
And though thoughtful Russians may be
hostages
to Putin’s arrogance and blunders, the rest of the world is not.
We must not be
hostages
to our extremists.
Hence the televised “confessions” that hearkened back to the taking of
hostages
in the American Embassy (the “nest of spies”), and the rallies against foreign embassies.
Otherwise, the violence would continue, spawning new
hostages
to history – and ensuring that future generations would be taught new wrongs to set right.
Japan’s Beheaded IllusionsTOKYO – Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was on a six-day tour of Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, and Palestine, when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) posted a video online threatening to murder two Japanese hostages, Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto, if his government did not pay $200 million within 72 hours.
But it seems that Abe’s Middle East tour presented a greater opportunity for ISIL to make the most of its Japanese
hostages.
Instead of giving the group what they wanted – the release of 53 militants imprisoned in Israel and four other countries – the Israeli Army launched Operation Thunderbolt, rescuing the
hostages
at Uganda’s Entebbe Airport.
Only three
hostages
and one Israeli commando – Yonatan Netanyahu, the elder brother of current Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu – were killed in the operation.
The Japanese authorities got lucky: When the pilot landed first in South Korea, the hijackers released their 129
hostages
in exchange for permission to continue to Pyongyang, where they gained asylum.
But you will have passed up an opportunity to assist the
hostages.
Most moral philosophers would say that helping the
hostages
is the right thing to do in this instance, even if doing so also helps the terrorist.
But no regime has ever used its citizens so deliberately as tools to arouse world sympathy, as
hostages
to modern sensitivities.
Moreover, Qatar has used its leverage over the Islamists that it funds to help secure the release of Western
hostages.
Hunger drove the armies to take
hostages
for ransom.
Japan’s Sensitive Military NormalizationNEW YORK – Soon after the Islamic State's brutal murder in January of the Japanese
hostages
Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for the country's “biggest reform" of its military posture since the end of World War II.
Over the last eight years, these narco-terrorists have murdered thousands of persons and kidnapped more than 6,000 hostages, including 140 foreigners.
He was directly involved in the holding of American
hostages
in Iran, though exactly how much so remains a matter of dispute.
Some Colombians demand a “humanitarian accord” – an exchange of prisoners for
hostages
– and reject “blood and fire” rescue attempts.
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