Today, the most significant overall restraint on military operations concerns the avoidance of collateral damage. |
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Under these conditions, there is great risk of collateral damage to newsmakers. |
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Misguided or unguided precision munitions can lead to significant collateral damage and fratricide. |
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The eternal droughts and continental erosion and melting polar ice caps, that's what you call your collateral damage. |
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The quick responsive action of MSgt Henley prevented what could have easily been a major fire with possible significant collateral damage. |
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Finally, munitions must be able to destroy the target without causing undue collateral damage. |
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Mistakes or excessive collateral damage can undermine its potential effectiveness. |
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Therefore, an attacker must not employ weapons that would cause excessive collateral damage. |
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Inert squash head ammunition would also be useful for punching holes in walls with minimal collateral damage. |
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Sickness produces symptoms and collateral damage that disrupt or sabotage health. |
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Even before a single missile has been launched there has been significant collateral damage, all of it on our own side. |
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We need to think of collateral damage more in terms of innocent civilians being killed, rather than reconstructing buildings used by the enemy. |
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Any response must consider the possible collateral damage potentially caused by such retaliation. |
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We might have to strike back at some heads on this terrorist hydra, try not to slaughter innocents, and swallow the collateral damage. |
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However, if such are killed in crossfire or if used as human shields, they become collateral damage. |
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The enemy threat was eliminated in a matter of minutes and there was no collateral damage. |
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We accept no liability for any kind of collateral damage which could occur due to failure or malfunction of the device. |
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These areas are expected to be protected from direct or inadvertent damage following mitigating measures including potential collateral damage. |
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Although it is very difficult to avoid collateral damage, an integral part of military planning is to avoid harming civilians. |
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The faster that a system can be shut down, the lower the risk of collateral damage. |
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There are, however, limits on such incidental or collateral damage. |
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In addition, the bomber force's precision has reduced or eliminated most negative effects, such as the collateral damage and fratricide associated with their use. |
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Moreover, because of its accurate target detection and precision strike capability, the risk of fratricide and collateral damage will be greatly reduced. |
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And, how does the concept of collateral damage apply to cyberattacks? |
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Please, please, please come down in favour of preventing the collateral damage. |
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Fictionists were granted their fictions with less collateral damage to their biographies in those days. |
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They will be known as collateral damage, unavoidable flotsam and jetsam from the mighty tides of war. |
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When we talk about the no-fly zone, when we talk about the collateral damage, do not let us forget that point. |
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The violent release of thermal energy associated with the failure vaporized many of its components and caused considerable collateral damage. |
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It is happening around the world, as globalisation collateral damage, so to speak. |
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Their mission is to cause collateral damage when they attack and to strike fear. |
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The backdrop is possible collateral damage to the stability of Central Asia. |
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Her family was a victim of collateral damage, and her school had been attacked by insurgents. |
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The PKK is taking its attacks inside Turkey again and is increasingly prepared to accept collateral damage. |
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On the contrary, the loss of civilian lives is simply dismissed as collateral damage. |
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In both cases, the equity bear market was well-entrenched with severe collateral damage to the economy. |
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The air force approached this strategically defensive task with an offensive predisposition, one that inexorably led to considerable collateral damage. |
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Their collateral damage has drawn opprobrium from human rights groups and arms control advocates. |
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More regulations, and further public education may be required to cap and stem the collateral damage. |
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The massive bombing campaigns and artillery barrages of World War II caused a great deal of collateral damage, but very often failed to destroy the intended target. |
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The 99 percent are coming to see that we are collateral damage in an all-out effort by the super-rich to get even richer. |
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The entrance in an internal wall is far wider than the original but Lounsbury sustained some minor collateral damage anyway. |
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Everyone else was concerned about civilian collateral damage. |
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Consequently, an attacker who acts reasonably in bombing an otherwise legitimate target has a defense against the charge that excessive collateral damage occurred. |
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In such circumstances, the attacking elements will be required to expose themselves to enemy direct fire to engage them without undue collateral damage. |
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Physical collateral damage can always be fixed, or structures replaced. |
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The reduction in collateral damage may have the same effect. |
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And the intangible collateral damage in terms of loss of reputation, morale and confidence in business relationships is almost impossible to quantify. |
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The troops would need to be trained to respond robustly with armed force to attacks against them but by applying force precisely, using the minimum force necessary and avoiding collateral damage. |
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The spread of SARS has to be dealt with but even more important, we have to limit the collateral damage of a nation that could become quite phobic about how this is being dealt with. |
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Furthermore, police are equipped with heavy military hardware and lack the proper police equipment and technical skills that help to minimise the risk to life and collateral damage. |
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The collateral damage of business failures is significant for all companies and may mean that operating lines and cash flow will be under pressure. |
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We need a policy and we also have to remember our collateral damage. |
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Nor do they include collateral damage where, for example, teachers are killed or schools damaged accidentally by general military violence rather than attacks deliberately targeted against them. |
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With the increasing concern over collateral damage, the GBU-38 has grown in demand as the weapon of choice for strike forces. |
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Study author Dr Saioa Lopez said that as a consequence of depigmentation there has been collateral damage to health. |
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This was the first firing test in the world using a laser-guided missile with a vertical terminal phase, enabling full control over impact parameters and minimizing the risks of collateral damage. |
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Abuses in one sector do not spare the others from collateral damage. |
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Opinionated, comfortably middle class, bridge partners, gourmets, and patronizing patronesses of the arts, these two zany women regale each other with chat, prattle, gossip and collateral damage. |
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In all cases, the collateral damage expected to result from an authorised use of force must not be disproportionate to the legitimate purpose for which that force is used. |
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The main operational objective being sought is precision improvement in order to limit collateral damage, alleviate logistics and fire in the vicinity of friendly forces. |
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But the most critical tension concerns the need to balance minimal own-casualties and low collateral damage with operational effectiveness. |
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Even so, Brussels staffers say that the lighter touch of their regulation would avoid the risk of decimating Africa's mineral industry through the collateral damage caused by an investment flight. |
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Also, thousands of ignorant gunsels lack the discipline, the finesse, the criminal minds to do dirty business without bloodshed, without collateral damage. |
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The possibility of false claims exists with kinetic attacks as well, but claims about collateral damage from a cyberattack are likely to be even more difficult to refute. |
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