Thomas, only fourteen years older than Henry himself, was a respected mercer with a talent for languages and diplomacy. |
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And for the first time Middle Eastern oil was now lubricating the wheels of international diplomacy. |
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The American neocons only ever had contempt for this self-abasing style of diplomacy. |
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If we are to address the roots of terror, it will be through diplomacy and justice, not more terror. |
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Wallach and other leaders of worldwide popular dissent have been making the same argument about bait-and-switch diplomacy for a decade. |
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Your diplomacy, responsible nature and tactfulness will make you popular at your workplace. |
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But the increased political sensitivities of the international community in the nuclear age seemed to make gunboat diplomacy quite unacceptable. |
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For all the occasional bouts of moderate rhetoric, pre-emptive strikes and gunboat diplomacy form the essence of this thinking. |
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In an ironic reversal, the greatest colonial power becomes the helpless victim of Martian gunboat diplomacy. |
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The western powers have proved yet again their willingness to resort to intimidation and old-style gunboat diplomacy to achieve their ends. |
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Therefore he adopted a strategy of diplomacy backed with the threat of military force if required. |
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When dealing with a brutal regime, diplomacy must be backed by credible force. |
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But when such disputation is telegraphed to a wired world in real time, it can wreak havoc with U.S. diplomacy. |
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But scholarly studies on the pre-independence history of Indian diplomacy are too few. |
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He was a very prickly person and took criticism badly, it took all Halley's skills in diplomacy to nurse the Principia to publication. |
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It would certainly require an incredible level of diplomacy and sensitivity. |
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Their admirable diplomacy on this sensitive question has an explanation not immediately obvious. |
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Now is the time for a return to traditional, professional Japanese diplomacy. |
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Tact and diplomacy are also important, and again, it is to the Moon, Venus and Libra that we look for support in that area. |
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By concentrating on tact and diplomacy you can more effectively take advantage of your intellectual potential. |
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People in this category do well in employment requiring diplomacy and tact. |
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We believe that women can excel in the field as it is not all about muscle but tact and diplomacy. |
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All these conflicts were eventually resolved by diplomacy, dialogue and concession. |
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Tactful diplomacy is, ultimately, the only sensible way to resolve this dispute. |
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Can you talk about the delicacy and diplomacy needed to secure your footage? |
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The optimum solution will be one that involves diplomacy, dignity and justice for all concerned. |
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Trying to make staff regulations for a team like that was a task requiring diplomacy and sensitivity. |
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An ability to influence with subtlety and diplomacy should not go unmentioned. |
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The end of the cold war represented a dramatic change in the international context within which diplomacy is conducted. |
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Of course, not everyone has been enamoured of this latest incursion into international diplomacy. |
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Bad mouthing the Germans in mid-bid probably wasn't the smartest piece of international diplomacy. |
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It is a symbolic reassertion of the efficacy of diplomacy and dialogue over the use of force in international disputes. |
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Downer thinks Australia must become firmer in its private diplomacy over Taiwan. |
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We also hope the United States will apply flexible diplomacy, apart from its basic principles. |
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It also shows that simple dialogue or Western-backed diplomacy cannot provide solutions to the conflict. |
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What we are trying to do now is to use diplomacy and use political actions to resolve this. |
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Summit diplomacy has become a very important component of international diplomacy. |
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China should take note here and apply diplomacy to foster good neighbor relations. |
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Mr Chairman, Zambia has invested a lot in diplomacy and international relations. |
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Italy has oscillated between active involvement in EU diplomacy and a passive presence in the system. |
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There's a familiar rule that diplomacy works best when backed by the threat of force. |
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They are also expected to follow accepted practices of diplomacy and to support international organizations. |
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Laval was a tough negotiator and manipulator, an activist in diplomacy in which he pushed at the frontiers of constraint. |
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However, military activity had left all sides weak and secret diplomacy took over from military conflict. |
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When English-Indian relations did not turn upon sheer power they rested on diplomacy. |
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Skill in diplomacy could not replace skill in war, but the former was essential to final success. |
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In real diplomacy you don't gratuitously insult allies you might need in the future. |
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Rather than seeing this as a sign of weakness, I see it as a sign of grace, courtesy, and diplomacy. |
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The description aptly described the new diplomacy of detente emerging from the 1972 super-power summit. |
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There is much to show that naming practices were carefully considered and raised issues of protocol and diplomacy as well as propaganda. |
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Hollywood is a place where nuanced language and delicate diplomacy is needed in offering up a critique of your betters. |
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The dialogue of diplomacy then carries the threat of war rather than the promise of peace. |
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In the conduct of diplomacy, king and minister proceeded from different assumptions. |
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Kissinger had in mind the geopolitical balance of power and the new centrality of international economics that complicated diplomacy. |
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In addition, the Asian style of diplomacy typically shows a preference for dialog over binding decision-making. |
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Even by the double-dealing standards of international diplomacy this is a breathtakingly cynical bargain. |
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Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to martyr sport as the cradle for world diplomacy. |
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His dire predictions ignore the intricacies of diplomacy, foreign policy, and world history. |
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After all this time in prison I don't feel up to the level of diplomacy required to play footsie with traitors. |
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Once in Ireland, he floundered in a confused situation, victim of Charles I's tricky diplomacy. |
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This is not a precondition but rather a logical position, in keeping with the rules and conventions of international diplomacy. |
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Even there, Adam created a trio of sisters whose emotional interplay betrays an intimate knowledge of twisted sibling diplomacy. |
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Only Congress can declare war and only Congress has the constitutional authority to raise money for war and diplomacy. |
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The United States has used diplomacy, police work, better intel and military presence to exert the pressure. |
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In mid-1944, Roosevelt interrupted his concentration on war and diplomacy to consider election-year politics. |
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Thanks to his diplomacy the arrival of the colonists from France did not develop into an major incident. |
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The coercive diplomacy that could yet lead to the dictator's disarmament or his disposal by his own side must be pursued. |
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For coercive diplomacy to succeed, the demands made of the targeted government need to be precise, limited and deliverable. |
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The threat of force is sometimes a necessary component of coercive diplomacy. |
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A decade ago, NGOs were fairly peripheral to major international diplomacy. |
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Many of the comments were naive, muddled and ignorant of the realities of international diplomacy. |
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It's a trying week for diplomacy, but blessed are the peacemakers for they shall find creative ways of conflict resolution. |
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Alexander was warm-hearted and generous, even to acquaintances and enemies, and his chivalrousness and diplomacy are legendary. |
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For example, we have pulled your chestnuts out of the fire in two world wars that were occasioned by European diplomacy. |
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Tens of thousands of lives seem a steep price to pay to give diplomacy a chance. |
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China occupies a central position in Japan's Asian diplomacy, and the Taiwan issue is key to Japanese diplomacy toward China. |
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I think we're already beginning to see cash diplomacy getting a little bit out of hand. |
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The Shield of Achilles synthesises his various strands of expertise, weaving history with statecraft, law, diplomacy and military strategy. |
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His approach to diplomacy will decide the nation's position on the world stage for a long time to come. |
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But new recruits will need to cultivate diplomacy, and that frequently eludes a successful newspaper hack. |
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Mercury in Sagittarius in the 6th square Mars is not a signature for tact and diplomacy. |
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Normally one would expect a journalist to display a certain amount of tact and diplomacy, touched with a sprinkling of humour and objectivity. |
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The key factor making war a more attractive option than diplomacy is the collapse of any popular support for the principle of non-intervention. |
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I was in awe of her sharp intelligence, of the way her diplomacy could charm the fangs off a viper. |
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The seating plan was drawn up using French, the traditional language of diplomacy. |
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This marks the beginning of a new kind of diplomacy in which the best of heaven is being invoked. |
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The other Europeans, who have urged caution and diplomacy, will not be so forthright. |
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It was only with a man of such urbanity and diplomacy that Cukor could fully relax beside a tape recorder. |
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The basis of the past policy behind economic diplomacy is now turned upside down. |
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Perhaps you would prefer we returned to the unprincipled behaviour displayed by Keating and friends, conveniently termed diplomacy. |
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Never very numerous, they reached this commanding position by an incisive and unexcelled diplomacy. |
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Congratulations on being designated the next undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. |
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The organization used quiet diplomacy to work with Ontario's bureaucrats to promote multiple use of Quetico park. |
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I will continue to seek solutions to the problems of this region through dialog and multilateral diplomacy. |
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Since then, his unadventurous diplomacy has led him to some roles unsuited to more outspoken figures. |
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Who acts on the principle that violence, force and the threat of bloodshed are worthy tools of diplomacy? |
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His diplomacy won over only the Illyrian king Genthius, whose support proved of little moment. |
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A burst of shuttle diplomacy will take him to four international capitals in three days. |
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Mr Blair was speaking at the Elysee Palace in Paris after breakfast talks with President Jacques Chirac, as part of his hectic shuttle diplomacy. |
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De Guingand's role as a foil to Montgomery was a vital one, and his diplomacy and tact helped palliate Montgomery's abrasiveness. |
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Intelligence, special operations forces, and diplomacy will have to be exquisitely coordinated. |
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The truth of the matter is that since the dawn of time, diplomacy has been closely linked to espionage. |
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John F. Kerry criticized Bush for failing to conduct adequate diplomacy before waging war on Iraq. |
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His refusal to give de Valera credit for his international diplomacy in the 1930s borders on the absurd. |
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It is time to stop pretending that diplomacy, watery sanctions, and under-funded humanitarian aid are always enough. |
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He weaves together critical exegesis with discussion of Kosovo, diplomacy, and the war itself. |
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Chung plans to study diplomacy as a visiting fellow at Stanford University and follow South Korean politics from the United States. |
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Cricket has become another form of diplomacy, and the rivalry is friendly and no longer bitter. |
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Labor's foreign policy affirms that engagement with Asia must always be at the forefront of our diplomacy. |
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Whenever questioned about the perilous financial predicament he always maintained a sense of diplomacy and realism about the situation. |
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This, however, leads to an ahistorical view of the world, and could lead to poor diplomacy and bad policy. |
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Ivanov said that the principle of reciprocity, a key principle in diplomacy, should be applied to the issue. |
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For Blair that may mean fewer flights of shuttle diplomacy and more time chiselling away at the coalface of the public services. |
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At stake for China is not only the regional security situation but also its newfound role as a broker in shuttle diplomacy. |
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This Financial Times piece does a nice job of describing the recent shuttle diplomacy over North Korea. |
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In the Middle East, Kissinger's shuttle diplomacy produced more show than substance. |
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Secretary of State Colin L. Powell is gearing up for a spate of shuttle diplomacy in the region in May, starting with Syria. |
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Frantic diplomacy by the United States, Britain and other countries brought the danger back down from the red zone, but just barely. |
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After a week of exhaustive shuttle diplomacy, taking in Ireland, Spain and Libya, Blair's two-day stay in Brussels was a chastening experience. |
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Despite its broad goals, by necessity, it is selective in its consideration of dollar diplomacy. |
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As for regime change, it is best viewed as a complement to diplomacy and deterrence. |
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Its aid to its allies has fueled controversy and dollar diplomacy has come in for criticism. |
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The labyrinthine diplomacy and politics of the Italian wars are the real subject of this painstaking book about what Jem meant to others. |
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Far from our gunboat diplomacy of the nineteenth century, have we now become the victim rather than the aggressor in a global economic struggle? |
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Equally, international diplomacy generally assumes that any dispute is ultimately resolvable through compromise and negotiation. |
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Its rulers could not have been that lethargic, or its diplomacy so tortuous, for it to have survived for such a long period. |
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We learned that economic sanctions over a long period of time and patient diplomacy can work. |
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The evidence is that there was quite a little diplomacy, aimed at coalition-forming for the largest purposes, throughout Asia at that time. |
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It also conjures up memories of the gunboat diplomacy that first pushed the United States onto the world stage a century ago. |
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British and American officials grew to dislike this aspect of diplomacy and considered it a veiled form of beggary. |
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This is the type of type diplomacy which put these countries on the outside to begin with. |
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Stand by for the world's sole superpower engaging in the 21st Century version of gunboat diplomacy. |
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Throughout the war, Confederate authorities supplemented cotton diplomacy by destroying cotton stockpiles that threatened to fall into Union hands. |
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The government avoided a war by successfully resolving the issues through diplomacy. |
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To date, much of the details of the diplomacy and even the interim deal between Iran and the West are shrouded in secrecy. |
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His astute detente diplomacy with the Soviet Union, trying to make the world a safer place, gets high marks. |
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Indeed, it's unclear what, if any, benefits the average Cuban will reap from increased diplomacy between the two countries. |
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Rather, after weeks of clumsy diplomacy, they consciously led their nations into battle. |
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Sanctions and saber-rattling alone were never going to do the trick, nor would periodic efforts at one-shot diplomacy. |
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Those who served abroad were treated with suspicion that they had been infected by European diplomacy. |
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In The History of the Maghrib, Ralph Mantheim states that the Andalusians introduced court etiquette, formalism and diplomacy into North African society. |
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Let's wait to see if both top diplomats make it to that table before declaring diplomacy a fruitless exercise. |
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In the Georgian conflict, as in the more subtle variants of energy diplomacy, Russians have shown a harshly utilitarian asperity in connecting means and ends. |
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If the President lined up every world leader in a line and systematically punched each of them in the gut in the name of unilateral diplomacy, would you still vote for him? |
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And they are not alone in their indifference to this latest round of shuttle diplomacy. |
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It wasn't about U.S. pressuring the parties to resume negotiations, the ever-present goal of Kerry's shuttle diplomacy. |
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Communicating with the Hermit Kingdom is never easy, and often requires 'track two' diplomacy. |
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You may call it tergiversation, but we pros call it diplomacy. |
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Egypt mobilized the majority of the Arab world in the defense of Kuwait, a vital contribution to U.S. diplomacy. |
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The 27-year-old will need to display a level of tact and diplomacy with which he has not previously ever been associated. |
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Deterrence, a centerpiece of Cold War diplomacy, encompasses maintaining credible forces and showing the flag at appropriate locations to deter an enemy's aggression. |
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The uae almost always conducts its diplomacy behind the scenes and rarely issues any public criticism of the United States. |
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Together, the Council presidency, High Representative, and Commissioner for External Affairs form a troika which represents the EU as a whole in international diplomacy. |
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A reticent leader, he acted by means of political machinations and diplomacy and never developed the showiness that had been so typical of his father. |
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Often in high-level diplomacy, key points made in private are restated publicly to underline their seriousness. |
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Previously, Ambassador Hughes served President George W. Bush as undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs. |
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Mr Blair met Gen Musharraf midway through a whirlwind round of shuttle diplomacy which had seen him meet Russian president Vladimir Putin in Moscow the previous evening. |
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The talks follow six months of shuttle diplomacy after a first round in Beijing last August failed to narrow the gulf over Pyongyang's atomic arms ambitions. |
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Intense diplomacy in the last few days resolved a number of late snags that threatened to unravel the agreement. |
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The Creeks were reputed to be a hospitable people skilled in diplomacy. |
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He is now a diplomacy and world affairs professor at occidental College in Los Angeles. |
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At the risk of making racist generalisations, why is it that Europeans and Americans are so clumsy and unsubtle and appear to be such galumphing oafs in diplomacy? |
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The foreign policy experts call it public diplomacy, or soft power. |
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I fear anything that comes out of today's flurry of diplomacy will just be a band-aid solution, typical of this inward-looking, negative, visionless government. |
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Both the president and his challenger conveniently suppose that diplomacy will somehow break what looks like the determination of both countries to become nuclear powers. |
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Kerry leans more toward economic diplomacy and engagement with regimes who may not be on their best behavior. |
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If history is any guide a lot of this diplomacy was doubtless clumsily done, in alternations between proffers of carrots and threats of the stick. |
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The fourth variant of coercive diplomacy is the carrot and stick approach. |
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You could try to agree with that neighbor to grow the same variety of corn, but if they don't respond to diplomacy, buy a package of old fashioned paper lunch bags. |
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The move also chimes with the stated aims of Charlotte Beers, who was appointed as undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs last month. |
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In fighting terrorism, the Government gives the lion's share of budget to the military while being close-fisted in diplomacy, said a report on Sunday. |
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Political posturing and faux diplomacy may be all we can expect. |
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And it is, say those familiar with previous inspections, a plodding, unglamorous business involving diplomacy, boring leg work, cunning and much analysis. |
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This report attempts to disprove the existence of an international code of diplomacy by contradistinguishing diplomatic practices between the North and the South. |
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There was no way that he should be allowed to speak for this country because he has no couth, no brains and doesn't know the meaning of the word diplomacy. |
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The young woman behind the counter in the office at Telegraph Cove down the coast was practising diplomacy on some disgruntled tourists when I arrived. |
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Our military learned how to deploy quickly to hot spots, de-escalate a situation, build order from chaos, work with NGOs, and do the muscle work of diplomacy. |
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It would be an opportunity to make new acquaintances and learn something about protocol, diplomacy, and the idiosyncrasies of other lands in one stroke. |
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This is an extraordinarily complex topic that has its roots in history, the global economy, the failure of diplomacy and the psychologies of the people involved. |
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Your grace and diplomacy take you to high places and to important people. |
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Then there is the United States war on Iraq, the 21st Century version of 19th Century gunboat diplomacy which threatens to usher in a new era in international relations. |
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Let's stop with the gunboat diplomacy and get a little smarter here. |
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This near intervention led one observer to note that gunboat diplomacy was clearly in line with the State Department commitment to pipelines and profits. |
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According to Chinese reports, Taiwanese ships will join the seven carriers being assembled in this modern rerun of 19th century gunboat diplomacy. |
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The initial French provocation, a direct takeover of Morocco in violation of recent treaties, was answered by German gunboat diplomacy to back its demand for compensation. |
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Both Indonesia and Malaysia also saw it as a means to protect themselves from gunboat diplomacy and foreign intervention in the affairs of their fledgling nations. |
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But the prime minister has devoted more of his tour to EU diplomacy than to US, and impressively straddled what otherwise might be a damaging divide between the powers. |
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But hypocrisy, duplicity and deception are recognized skills of diplomacy. |
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Despite repeated protestations to the contrary by administration officials, such critics describe its foreign policy as being based almost entirely on dollar diplomacy. |
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For decades they used dollar diplomacy to win over nations with limited budgets where small projects building roads, bridges, wells and fisheries went a long way. |
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We are doubling down on diplomacy in the surrounding region. |
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And, except under the most extreme circumstances, diplomacy trumps force. |
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The efforts to disconnect disaster aid from diplomacy for both Katrina and Bam could be viewed as being tit for tat in terms of the deliberate avoidance of disaster diplomacy. |
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In the antebellum era, cotton was not only the centerpiece of the romantic plantation but also a part of the world economy, as Confederates discovered with their failed policy of cotton diplomacy. |
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The cotton diplomacy of the Confederacy may be likened to the petroleum diplomacy of the Biafra movement, even though the world settings were different. |
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A second round of secret diplomacy by Anderson in February 1956 was equally unsuccessful. |
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With that accomplished by 1871 he then skillfully used balance of power diplomacy to preserve Germany's new role and keep Europe at peace. |
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Maurice, however, had long ago determined to limit his efforts against the Lombards to intrigue and diplomacy, pitting the Franks against them. |
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Commerce, science and technology, diplomacy, art, and formal education all contributed to English becoming the first truly global language. |
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Some of the harsh aspects of foreign concessions and privileges in China were moderated through diplomacy. |
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This was the attempt to make french less flowery and more acceptable in diplomacy rather than poetry. |
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However, Muhammad's diplomacy derailed the negotiations, and broke up the confederacy against him. |
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This served the purpose of preparing the young man for a leadership position at home, often in government or diplomacy. |
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After this, Henry relied on diplomacy, cultivating an alliance with Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor. |
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The government promoted active diplomacy in Africa and opposed the invasion of Iraq. |
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Daughters were important political assets in a world where diplomacy and marriage were closely linked. |
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The diplomacy worked to a certain extent, at least in Ulster, where the Scots had some support. |
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The talks were expected to begin on Tuesday after months of intense shuttle diplomacy by US Secretary of State John Kerry. |
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As important as telephone diplomacy is, shuttle diplomacy is also now needed, given the continuing risks of conflict. |
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A flurry of quiet diplomacy ensued, culminating in Baird's visit to the Gulf state this week to try to mend fences. |
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Besides the demographic reasons, a defensive strategy served the needs of French diplomacy towards Great Britain. |
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Sestanovich, describes foreign policy and diplomacy in a continuum cycling between periods of maximalism and retrenchment. |
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Kinglake, who portrayed the British as victims of newspaper sensationalism and duplicitous French and Ottoman diplomacy. |
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Following that speech, Blair embarked on two months of diplomacy rallying international support for military action. |
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Finally we get to see Assange forgoing diplomacy and deference. |
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Zirakchianzadeh added that Iran had officially offered the positive diplomacy of cooperation instead of unitization to the Kuwaiti side. |
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The Parliamentary Assembly also engages in parliamentary diplomacy, and has an extensive election observation program. |
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Americans polled in January 2003 widely favored further diplomacy over an invasion. |
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Taiwan and Papua New Guinea deny there was a tradeoff, while China accuses Taiwan of engaging in dollar diplomacy. |
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To Hitler's great annoyance, all his diplomacy failed to stop Britain declaring war when he invaded Poland. |
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Some even called him Chhote Vajpayee for his oratorial skills and political diplomacy. |
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Such disruptions will derail backchannel negotiations and diplomacy to rupture the confidence of both sides in each other. |
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Sharif has turned Kashmir into a bilateral issue, and accepted Indian conditions on terrorism and backchannel diplomacy. |
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Ambassador from the Republic of Hungary, who discussed music and diplomacy. |
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Now is not the time for lackadaisical, quiet and deferential diplomacy. |
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The kingdom's arms expenditure, social welfare spending and regional diplomacy all assume the availably of unlimited oil revenues. |
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But more than rogue diplomacy was on display in the Andean escape. |
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This will require power diplomacy in Addis Ababa and the region. |
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The pique will fade in time, but it will inhibit diplomacy for a while. |
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Mechanisms of influence can include the threat or use of force, economic interaction or pressure, diplomacy, and cultural exchange. |
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However, Confucius relied solely on diplomacy as he had no military authority himself. |
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These writers often add that the war could have been avoided in the first place by better diplomacy. |
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The peace process in Northern Ireland is a monument to American diplomacy. |
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Basel and Schaffhausen preferred quiet diplomacy while Zurich wanted armed conflict. |
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Moreover, what need more at this juncture is astute diplomacy to strike a golden mean between friends and the foes. |
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Quiet diplomacy allows ASEAN leaders to communicate without bringing the discussions into the public view. |
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Not that the Colombian parley was ever going to be easy diplomacy. |
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Despite its broad goals, by necessity, Financial Missionaries is selective in its consideration of dollar diplomacy. |
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Aa C The current Kerry-Lugar-Berman Bill is ham-fisted dollar diplomacy at its worst. |
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A highlight of Dubrovnik's diplomacy was the involvement in the American Revolution. |
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Joint NATO maneuvers are as much an exercise in diplomacy as in tactics and logistics. |
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In England, for example, King Charles II paid little attention to diplomacy, which proved disastrous. |
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It also brought the Han into contact with kingdoms in Southeast Asia, introducing diplomacy and trade. |
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Puerto Rico is a political anachronism, a throwback to the days of gunboat diplomacy and the handlebar mustache. |
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Nuclear diplomacy is the area of diplomacy related to preventing nuclear proliferation and nuclear war. |
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Gunboat diplomacy is the use of conspicuous displays of military strength as a means of intimidation in order to influence others. |
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Economic diplomacy is the use of foreign aid or other types of economic policy as a means to achieve a diplomatic agenda. |
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Bangladesh traditionally places a heavy reliance on multilateral diplomacy, especially in the United Nations. |
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Since the end of the Cold War the international community through international institutions has been focusing on preventive diplomacy. |
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But with limited resources at their disposal, conducting effective diplomacy poses unique challenges for small states. |
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Its leaders believed that peace was impossible because of capitalism, secret diplomacy, and the trade in armaments. |
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Small state diplomacy is receiving increasing attention in diplomatic studies and international relations. |
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Information gleaned from espionage is useful in almost all forms of diplomacy, everything from trade agreements to border disputes. |
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The information gathered by spies plays an increasingly important role in diplomacy. |
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In between that time, figures such as the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck were renowned for international diplomacy. |
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In diplomacy and economics William III transformed the English state's ideology and policies. |
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The revolution would see commoners take over the diplomacy of the French state, and of those conquered by revolutionary armies. |
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Perkin Warbeck claimed he was the younger of the Princes from 1490 and was recognised as such in international diplomacy outside England. |
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The elements of modern diplomacy slowly spread to Eastern Europe and Russia, arriving by the early 18th century. |
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Ambassadors were often nobles with little foreign experience and no expectation of a career in diplomacy. |
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Tuscany and Venice were also flourishing centres of diplomacy from the 14th century onwards. |
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Ancient India, with its kingdoms and dynasties, had a long tradition of diplomacy. |
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Chinese diplomacy was a necessity in the distinctive period of Chinese exploration. |
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Another notable event in Chinese diplomacy was the Chinese embassy mission of Zhou Daguan to the Khmer Empire of Cambodia in the 13th century. |
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Their Spanish or Portuguese was a lingua franca that enabled Sephardim from different countries to engage in commerce and diplomacy. |
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Unlike Julius, Alexander never made war unless absolutely necessary, preferring negotiation and diplomacy. |
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National diplomacy typically deploys its dexterity to secure advantage for one's nation. |
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Umayyad influence in western North Africa spread through diplomacy rather than conquest. |
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He then reinforced his keshig with the Koreans through both diplomacy and military force. |
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Because diplomacy and negotiation had failed, Edward III would have to back his claims with force to obtain the French throne. |
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This also showed Alexander's eagerness to fight, in contrast to his father's preference for diplomacy. |
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Though advised to use diplomacy, Alexander mustered 3,000 Macedonian cavalry and rode south towards Thessaly. |
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Aetius concentrated his limited military resources to defeat the Visigoths again, and his diplomacy restored a degree of order to Hispania. |
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He helped free historiography from antiquarianism, Eurocentrism, religious intolerance and a concentration on great men, diplomacy, and warfare. |
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But when campaigning against Germanic tribes, Alexander attempted to bring peace by engaging in diplomacy and bribery. |
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Beyond the frontiers, he secured the Empire with a buffer region of client states and made peace with the Parthian Empire through diplomacy. |
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Moldova has also achieved a Free Visa Regime with the EU which represents the biggest achievement of Moldovan diplomacy since independence. |
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But the outcome of Rome's disastrous campaigns into Dacia in AD 86 and AD 88 pushed Domitian to settle the situation through diplomacy. |
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Making use of their sophisticated warfare and superior diplomacy, the Byzantines managed to fend off assaults by the migrating barbarians. |
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Meanwhile, Papua New Guinea shifted its diplomatic recognition from Beijing to Taipei, an unexpected move described by China as resulting from dollar diplomacy. |
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But, he added, Taiwan should seek to strike a compromise with China and conduct ''flexible diplomacy'' rather than dollar diplomacy to expand its international presence. |
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His letters to Anne translate social codes of French diplomacy, Holbeinian portraiture, and Erasmian epistolary friendship into performances of personal desire. |
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The causes identified included arms races, alliances, militaristic nationalism, secret diplomacy, and the freedom of sovereign states to enter into war for their own benefit. |
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By a combination of war and diplomacy he dominated Wales for 45 years. |
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Born in Morton, he grew up on the Olympic Peninsula and in Olympia and attended Capital High School before studying trade and diplomacy at Georgetown University. |
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Usual responsibilities of this level of government are maintaining national security and exercising international diplomacy, including the right to sign binding treaties. |
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His successor, the young Henry VIII, had little time for his father's cautious diplomacy, and was soon heading towards a war with France, Scotland's historic ally. |
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He completely dominated Dutch politics and diplomacy in his first years afterwards, even monopolising the abortive peace talks before the expiration of the Truce. |
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Disillusioned that her telephone diplomacy with Putin failed, she's poised to go for more, to push her reputation as a tough Merkelvellian with the gloss of Mutti, a mother. |
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Whereas classical writers are fond of making ethical and legal distinctions between peace and war, Byzantines regarded diplomacy as a form of war by other means. |
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He passed through the regions of Teoca, Pacra, Bugue Bugue, Bononaima, and Chorizo, defeating some by force and befriending others through diplomacy. |
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These ways embrace the arts of war, espionage, and diplomacy. |
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This communication may take the form of propaganda, or more benign forms such as citizen diplomacy, individual interactions between average citizens of two or more nations. |
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Public diplomacy is exercising influence through communication with the general public in another nation, rather than attempting to influence the nation's government directly. |
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Toward the later empire, the soldiers assassinated emperors who preferred diplomacy and put their own most popular officers into the vacant office. |
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Also Costa Rican diplomacy neutralized US official support for Walker by taking advantage of the dispute between the magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt and William Walker. |
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The diplomatic resolution of the Cuban missile crisis in 1962 is a great example of the successful application of diplomacy against the Soviet Union. |
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These included a strong sense of discipline through drill and order, the use of diplomacy to gain allies, and the vital necessity for a secure supply line. |
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Augustus planned invasions in 34, 27 and 25 BC, but circumstances were never favourable, and the relationship between Britain and Rome settled into one of diplomacy and trade. |
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Kerry spent months engaging in shuttle diplomacy between the two sides before they agreed to return to the table after a five-year freeze in negotiations. |
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