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risks

n. (plural of risk English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: risk)

Usage examples of "risks".

Iraq, and its society is too heavily penetrated by Iraqi intelligence for Amman to be able to easily handle the risks of participating openly.

It was reasonable, too, that at this point in his life Minh should decide he had had enough of travel and prolonged absences, and had taken sufficient risks, including joining Harry Partridge on dangerous assignments.

This is the difference between deterrence and invasion as policy options, the difference between risks and costs.

Force Levels and Iraq After Saddam Reconstructing Iraq The Limits of Knowledge and Planning First Things First: Security and Humanitarian Considerations The Importance of the United Nations Following the Bosnia Model Administering the Country and Building a New Polity Military Reform Truth and Reconciliation A Necessary Task CONCLUSIONS: Not Whether, But When Half Measures Will No Longer Work Risks and Costs Sooner or Later?

For some demented reason, he had gone to a lot of trouble and taken risks to bring the cadavers, and most likely he would not leave them in the motor home for long.

Hope was to be found in other people, by reaching out, by taking risks, by opening her fortress heart.

For a man who liked to take risks, who believed in living life on the edge, he seemed to take excessive precautions when putting his pack of Dobermans through their training sessions.

Why would they bother extending their reach so far, taking the risks of operating here, with so many easier targets close to home?

Americans and others, who flirted with the law, taking high risks for big money.

He took risks The Evening News 431 and got away with them until it seemed, to himself and others, that his life was charmed.

In addition, there are potential risks if the United States does not address its policy toward Iraq at this time.

Thus, what is important about September 11 is that it has made Americans think twice about the risks inherent in the purely dovish position on Iraq that has so far predominated in U.

In other words, the Arab states perform a complex set of assessments about the risks involved to them in supporting the United States.

Thus, when they perform the complex assessment of the risks of supporting the United States, they tend to err on the side of caution, so it often takes a disproportionate effort on the part of the United States to secure their help.

In addition, Israel is likely to feel a greater sense of threat from Saddam if he is unchained, so Jerusalem may be more reticent to take risks for peace.