Region
in sentence
5209 examples of Region in a sentence
While she grows up, Price puts the finishing touches on forgeries making the girl baroness of Arizona, heiress to an entire
region.
At best, a nuclear-arms race would threaten to consume this already-unstable region, which would endanger the NPT, with far-reaching global consequences.
At worst, nuclear weapons would serve Iran’s “revolutionary” foreign policy in the region, which the country’s leaders have pursued since the birth of the Islamic Republic in 1979.
Iranian opposition forces would likely be the first victim of Western military action, and, elsewhere in the region, the Arab Spring would likely be submerged under a massive anti-Western wave of solidarity with Iran.
The
region
would be pushed back into violence and terror, instead of continuing its transformation from the bottom up.
Compared with the rest of the region, the country’s key sectors – including education, transport, communications, agriculture, and tourism – are professionally managed and the envy of much of East Africa.
Otherwise, it runs the risk of renewed chaos and violence, but this time in a more destabilized region, as Pakistan's current problems demonstrate.
And, in a year or two, it will be the pattern again for the long-term unemployed in the North Atlantic
region.
Yeltsin needs fresh ways to expand Russian influence in the
region.
Apec’s original intent was to promote economic cooperation and trade liberalization in the
region.
This will certainly enhance Russia’s role in a now suddenly volatile
region.
While some solutions in the area of drug-quality testing have come from African entrepreneurs like Simmons, such examples are extremely rare, and many are developed in the diaspora with the support of organizations from outside the
region.
For instance, a democratic and prosperous Russia would make a greater contribution to peace in the
region
than any amount of military spending by NATO would.
Insecurity in Africa’s Sahel region, already a growing concern in 2012, has, in the first month of 2013, led one EU member state to go to war in a
region
not far from Europe’s doorstep.
The G-20 decided not to deal with the issue and agreed to treat the 27-member European Union as a single
region.
This must change if the
region
is to provide modern jobs and better lives to its booming population and keep up with global development.
After all, it had staked its foreign policy on building relationships with its neighbors, and its leaders believed that their country’s NATO membership and geographical position would help it to assume an influential role in the
region.
If negotiations remain deadlocked, and proliferation increases in the region, the country might well pursue this course.
A nuclear-weapons program, he has argued, would bolster Turkey’s leadership position in the
region.
Further destabilizing the
region
are enduring tensions between Turkey and Israel.
Fifteen years of Middle East chaos unleashed by the 2003 Iraq war have taught the world one indisputable lesson: nobody in the White House, the CIA, Mossad, or the Saudi intelligence services has a clue as to what might happen next in the
region.
But, whatever we choose to call it, the danger is that the global economic crisis is providing an almost perfect alibi for governments and others in the
region
to continue with “business as usual,” when what is needed is a loud wake-up call.
The global economic crisis has merely helped to mask chronic structural imbalances within the
region.
According to World Bank figures, the Middle East North Africa (MENA)
region
suffered a 25% fall in per capita incomes during the last 25 years of the twentieth century, when oil prices were low.
These funds’ managers rightly complain that insufficient investment opportunities exist in the
region
in agriculture and manufacturing.
The question is how to increase the absorptive capacity of the
region
and build a modern industrial base.
The interconnectedness of the problems in the outer circle of the
region
and those pertaining to the Arab-Israeli conflict in the inner circle was shown by the first Bush administration, which, in October 1991, following the first Gulf War, organized a major international conference aimed at securing an Arab-Israeli peace.
If he does not change course in Iraq and beyond, his presidency might draw the curtain on long decades of American hegemony in the Middle East – to the detriment of its closest allies in the
region.
Rather than take the diplomatic initiative to end the fighting and restore stability in Yemen, the Trump administration has continued to fan the flames of an ongoing Saudi-Iranian proxy war that is causing untold suffering and roiling the
region.
An increase in strategic agricultural investments, from African donors or international sources, could help other countries in the
region
reap similar rewards.
Back
Next
Related words
Countries
Which
Would
Economic
Their
Other
World
Could
Country
Political
There
Across
People
Military
Security
Where
Should
Years
While
Growth