Sentences with phrase «foreign leaders so»

He's deleted tweets in the past, including the infamous covfefe one, and he doesn't follow what has been accepted as protocol by previous presidents when it comes to using secure devices, including using an aging handset believed to be running an insecure version of Android and even handing out his personal phone number to foreign leaders so they can reach him directly.

Not exact matches

• The NSA monitored the phone calls of 35 world leaders and encouraged other government agencies to share their «Rolodexes» of foreign politicians so it could monitor them.
World leaders typically exchange gifts, and Trump and Abe did so when Abe rushed to New York City in November to become the first foreign leader to meet with Trump after the election.
The astonishing ability of the China bulls, both foreign and Chinese, to celebrate every unexpected decline in growth and every new surge in debt as if they somehow justified nearly a decade's worth of denials of the urgency of China's rebalancing has done so much damage to China that the sooner Beijing's leaders finally turn against the bulls, as I believe they might finally have done, the better for the Chinese people and the Chinese economy.
When it comes to President Donald Trump's constellation of foreign investments, properties, and companies, much of the attention so far has been on his business's apparent violation of the Constitution's emoluments clause, which bars officeholders from taking gifts from foreign leaders.
The leaders of the Mexican Catholic Church are traitors to this country and as far as I am concerned until the so - called church, which is really a foreign enemy, stops providing sanctuary to lawbreakers, be they pedophile priests or illegal immigrants, you can not call yourself Catholic and be considered a loyal American.
No pope in history had been so universally acclaimed by Jewish leaders throughout the world: the renowned Nobel Prize - winning physicist Albert Einstein; Chaim Weizmann, who would become Israel's first President; Moshe Sharett, who would become Israel's first Foreign Minister and second Prime Minister; Rabbi Isaac Herzog, the Chief Rabbi of Israel» all of these figures showered Pius with praise for his actions in defense of the Jews.
These so - called religious leaders were running a profitable foreign currency operation on the temple grounds.
I am sure that when these leaders wake up each morning, they are not thinking about foreign policy, but about domestic social unrest, the lack of provision of a proper welfare system, about how to deal with the issue of internal migrants (some 200 million people on the move from villages to urban areas demanding the same rights as urban locals), and so on.
The Labour leader has had precisely nothing to say about foreign affairs during his time at the head of the party so he will have to forgive us now for not taking his late concern about events overseas particularly seriously.
Moreover, most foreign leaders seem to take what Trump says with a grain of salt, so that some of his more provocative statements or actions (like the hand - shake debacle) have not caused major problems — yet.
Hilary Benn remains a key party figure, but how long can he continue when his views on foreign policy are so at odds with those of his leader?
Ahead of the Manchester hustings, Sir Menzies, the party's acting leader and foreign affairs spokesman, said: «I want to win power, so that we can give power away.
Not since Robin Cook at his rambunctious best has a Labour Foreign Affairs spokesman been so strikingly independent of his party leader.
Hitting the 0.7 % target for foreign aid so Britain can be a world leader in bringing relief to the hungriest and most vulnerable people on the planet.
In his weekly Foreign Affairs column, Garvan Walshe reflects on Russia: «Moscow's foreign policy has become the personal codpiece of its diminutive leader — he of the staged archaeological driving expeditions (think of the ageing medieval king whose servants would tie deer and boar to trees so they wouldn't escape the shaky royal arrow).Foreign Affairs column, Garvan Walshe reflects on Russia: «Moscow's foreign policy has become the personal codpiece of its diminutive leader — he of the staged archaeological driving expeditions (think of the ageing medieval king whose servants would tie deer and boar to trees so they wouldn't escape the shaky royal arrow).foreign policy has become the personal codpiece of its diminutive leader — he of the staged archaeological driving expeditions (think of the ageing medieval king whose servants would tie deer and boar to trees so they wouldn't escape the shaky royal arrow).»
The C.I.A. has a long history of so - called influence operations to help favored candidates in foreign elections with money or propaganda, and on a few occasions even helping overthrow elected leaders seen as hostile to the United States.
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