Rockets
in sentence
141 examples of Rockets in a sentence
I guess the best way to describe this would be sort of a Thai version of Robin Hood in which the hero (Dan Chupong) uses
rockets
instead of arrows.
And boy does this guy have some
rockets!
He has a ton of little
rockets
that he shoots at the bad guys and then there's the bad boy that he can ride like a surfboard!
And apparently he has flint in his fingertips to light these
rockets.
With her and a street wise hustler by his side, Chappy and the vets out fit the planes with air to ground
rockets
and set out to prove that its about the man, not the machine.
A radical group is loose in San Francisco, and they have stolen some L.A.W.S.
rockets
and plan to use them.
There's that ridiculous scene where everyone is getting covered in mud in the subway, and all the model
rockets
and the rock are not convincing enough, because you can tell their models, especially with the crappy explosions.
More
rockets
and missiles fell on northern Israel in 33 days than hit Britain during all of World War II.
In Lebanon in 2006, Hezbollah fought Israel through well-trained cells that combined propaganda, conventional military tactics, and
rockets
launched from densely populated civilian areas, achieving what many in the region considered a political victory.
They will need to provide medium-range
rockets
and light armored vehicles to anti-regime forces, in addition to training them to use their weapons properly.
On the other hand, diplomatic means may bring about the release of the Israeli soldier and put a stop to the firing of Qassam
rockets
from Gaza into Israel – a daily occurrence that has challenged the credibility of the new Israeli government under Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
In a further telling move, Haniyeh also recently suggested merging Hamas with the Islamic Jihad movement, which continues to target Israeli civilians with
rockets
fired from Gaza.
That is the condition Nasrallah violated by ordering an attack on an Israeli patrol nowhere near the Sheba farms and launching
rockets
into Israeli territory.
Over the years, Hezbollah has received and stored several thousand
rockets
and some one hundred longer-range missiles from Iran.
Recently, and very revealingly, two Iranian leaders threatened Israel with bombardment by Hezbollah’s
rockets
if Israel attacked Iran’s nuclear installations.
Thus, Israel is using the opportunity brought by the current fighting to search out and destroy Hezbollah’s underground and other hidden sites where it keeps its
rockets
and missiles.
Soon, Hezbollah
rockets
supplied by Syria and Iran were striking northern Israel.
In fact, almost immediately after Trump’s announcement on the JCPOA, Iranian troops stationed in Syria reportedly fired
rockets
into Israel.
The first to revolt was engine designer Valentin Glushko, whose RD-170 liquid-propellant engine is used on Russian and some American
rockets.
Likewise, the lack of defenses against short-range
rockets
with small warheads is simply common sense.
It had been assumed that thousands of Hezbollah
rockets
fired in concentrated barrages – which cancel out the inaccuracy of unguided
rockets
and powerfully compound blast effects – would kill many civilians, perhaps hundreds each day.
Hezbollah, however, distributed its
rockets
to village militias that were good at hiding them from air attacks, sheltering them from artillery, and from probing Israeli unmanned air vehicles, but that were incapable of launching them effectively in simultaneous launches against the same targets.
Of course, it was well known that Hezbollah – viewed with good reason as a terrorist organization – had been stockpiling an arsenal of Katyusha rockets, as well as longer-range guided missiles.
Fighters train next to schools, and
rockets
are stored in the basements of apartment buildings.
Even if Israel’s current war against Gaza is a just war – which is suggested by its attempts at limited and “measured” retaliation after eight years of Hamas
rockets
followed its unilateral retreat from Gaza – it is therefore a very dirty war, too.
Or should Israel respond “proportionally,” by firing 10 to 80 rockets, indiscriminately aimed against Gazan homes and schools, every day for the next few years?
Olmert, Defense Minister Ehud Barak, and Foreign Minister Tzippi Livni have cast aside their political rivalries in order to orchestrate an answer: Israel must fight off the Gazan
rockets.
In August 2013,
rockets
containing deadly sarin gas struck Ghouta, a rebel-controlled suburb near Damascus.
Hamas responded to the West Bank arrests with a barrage of
rockets
that reached Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, though without causing any injuries.
In firing
rockets
at Israel, Hamas invited a military response.
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