Stationed
in sentence
154 examples of Stationed in a sentence
There is also an American proposal to allow the Badr Brigade – a wing of the Palestine Liberation Army that is currently
stationed
in Jordan – to relocate to the Palestinian territories as Abbas’s rapid reaction force in Gaza in anticipation of a feared civil war.
Should search-and-rescue aircraft and vessels be
stationed
in the vicinity?
Although President George W. Bush apologized twice for the deaths of the girls, demands continue to escalate for changing the Status of Force Agreement (SOFA) that governs the legal treatment of American troops
stationed
in South Korea.
A crisis could stem from other factors as well: a large increase in the number of nuclear warheads that North Korea produces, evidence that it is selling nuclear materials to terrorist groups, or some use of its conventional military forces against South Korea or US forces
stationed
there.
Given that Seoul and US troops
stationed
in South Korea are well within range of thousands of artillery pieces, the toll in lives and physical damage would be immense.
In fact, it is all but incomprehensible that while the future of NATO is being decided in the Hindu Kush mountains, and while thousands of European soldiers
stationed
there are risking their lives, Pakistan – the key to the success or failure of the mission in Afghanistan – is not given any role in NATO’s plans and calculations.
Although the British had 100,000 troops
stationed
near the Suez Canal at the time, they chose not to intervene.
Historically, it has deployed only 70-80% of the 22,000 soldiers that the treaty allows in Zone A. And the military has never established a regional command in Sinai, preferring to allow units temporarily
stationed
there to report to their superiors scattered around Cairo and its environs.
While army units or riot squads (OMON)
stationed
in Moscow are too disgruntled by the recent police and military reforms to participate in a bloody clampdown, special-operations forces from the provinces, staffed with veterans of the Chechen war, might cherish the excitement of sticking it to the Moscow fat cats.
In June, the Bush administration revealed its plan to withdraw some 12,500 of the 37,000 US soldiers
stationed
in South Korea by the end of 2005.
This strain further reduces the risk of having US troops
stationed
on the Korean side of China’s border.
Ivory Coast’s third key stakeholder is France, which under President Charles de Gaulle had granted independence to its former African colonies on the condition that French troops remain
stationed
on their territories, and that their economies remain tightly linked to France.
So China needs to know now that a reunified Korea would not be its enemy, and that the US would withdraw its troops that are currently
stationed
in South Korea.
Although the US Army recently rotated heavy brigades through Europe for military exercises, its permanently
stationed
troops are equipped only for limited interventions.
In 2014, after China
stationed
an oil rig in waters claimed by Vietnam, ships from the two countries engaged in ramming and water-cannon battles at sea; anti-Chinese riots in Vietnam followed.
Here, unexpected and genuinely new decisions have been announced: an additional US aircraft carrier group will be moved to the Persian Gulf;Patriot anti-aircraft missiles will be
stationed
in the Gulf states; and the additional 21,000 soldiers far exceed what the American generals had asked for to deal with Iraq.
Indeed, the Japan Defense Agency recently outlined three scenarios for a Chinese attack against Japan, and announced that it is planning to redeploy its troops from the north (where they were originally
stationed
to defend Japan against the former Soviet Union) to the south, facing China.
South Korea pays more than 40% of the operating costs of US forces
stationed
there; it also covered 92% of the US command’s $10.7 billion move to new facilities outside of Seoul, and it purchases billions of dollars’ worth of US military hardware.
Today, China has thousands of People’s Liberation Army troops
stationed
in the Pakistani-held part of J&K.
This was essentially a garrison state, built for the protection of five Soviet armies – spanning 19 divisions and comprising 500,000 soldiers – that had been
stationed
there ever since 1945.
When Indian and Bangladeshi soldiers are
stationed
in Africa without malaria screening, the risk of deadly disease transmission may increase dramatically.
In addition, Japanese policymakers currently must contend with Trump’s obstinacy on the issue of Japan’s host-nation support for US forces
stationed
in the country, with the administration appearing to press Japan for a massive increase.
Now, the Iraqi parliament has demanded (albeit symbolically) the withdrawal of US troops
stationed
in the country – which would be in Iran’s interest.
Although the US has announced plans to station another 1,000 troops in Poland, in addition to the 4,500 it already has there, it is not clear whether the extra forces would be drawn from those currently
stationed
in Germany, or from the US.
As a result, there are now 4,400 US troops
stationed
in Poland.
Trump has also dismissed North Korea’s ongoing short-range missile tests as irrelevant, even though US, South Korean, and Japanese intelligence analysts see them as evidence of the North’s growing capacity to launch strikes against Japan and South Korea (and against American forces
stationed
in both countries).
The cashier's office being very small, they preferred to wait at the door,
stationed
in groups on the pavement, barring the way in a crowd that was constantly renewed.
"It's a present from Lydie," replied Jeanlin, who neglected to add that Lydie had stolen it, by his orders, from a huckster at Montsou,
stationed
before the Tete-Coupée Bar.
Conseil,
stationed
beside me, stared straight ahead.
"My helmsman is
stationed
behind the windows of a pilothouse, which protrudes from the topside of the Nautilus's hull and is fitted with biconvex glass."
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