Example sentences of "[adj] [coord] security " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The government is reviewing the cases of about 60 people sentenced for political or security offences to see if they might qualify for pardon .
2 According to a government report published on Aug. 9 , cases of espionage in Switzerland involving agents from Eastern Europe continued to increase ; 65 of the 91 cases recorded from 1980 to 1988 involved these countries , most of which desired technological rather than political or security information , and over the same period 17 of the 24 diplomats and officials expelled were from Eastern Europe .
3 Words of condemnation from our political or security leaders will not solve anything , but they will reassure the public that someone , somewhere is concerned about the attacks on them .
4 Words of condemnation from our political or security leaders will not solve anything , but they will reassure the public that someone , somewhere is concerned about the attacks on them .
5 The mobile phone has much to offer the family in practical , social and security terms .
6 As part of the disestablishment of the CPCz , the matrix of party organizations in the economic , political , social and security spheres was dissolved in the months following the November revolution .
7 The EC plan envisaged a free association of sovereign states co-operating on trade , fiscal and security matters , with a council of ministers , an executive commission and a court of appeal .
8 Every President since John Kennedy has used the Wall to dramatise the global Communist threat , to assert American leadership of the Western world , and to underpin fundamental foreign and security policy directions .
9 Euro-hopefuls argue that if Europe had already been committed to a common foreign and security policy , its military contribution in the Gulf would have been swifter and more effective .
10 The other is that efforts to forge a European foreign and security policy ( loudly backed in principle by the Germans ) may be doomed .
11 In foreign and security policy , and in interior-ministry collaboration , the commission will have no monopoly of proposal ; nor will it have much say in carrying out policy .
12 The entablature , the European Council , straddles a series of pillars : the old EC , the new EMU , foreign and security policy , and interior-ministry co-operation .
13 In foreign and security policy the European Council will , like the French presidency , decide as well as guide ; it will have links with the Western European Union , a defence pact of nine Community members .
14 Develop common European Community foreign and security policies .
15 He explained that the British envisaged that the union , having at its apex the European Council consisting of heads of government , would have beneath it distinct pillars of co-operation , with the Treaty of Rome and intergovernmental pillars representing respectively foreign and security policy co-operation and actions against drugs and terrorism overseen by interior and justice ministers .
16 Referring to the June draft treaty in its aims to build upon the Single European Act by strengthening co-operation on foreign and security policy , he made the point that , as the Gulf conflict had shown , there was a considerable difference between the member states , but that there had been a considerable degree of united action in supporting the new democracies in central and eastern Europe in relation to the Baltic states and in promoting the Prime Minister 's safe havens initiative .
17 The Franco-German joint statement speaks of democratic legitimation of the union , making Europe 's institutions more efficient , ensuring unity and coherence in every sphere and implementing a common foreign and security policy .
18 In December , you hear people say , the Community was talking loftily about putting together a common European foreign and security policy ; but when the war started in January , they all went their separate ways .
19 The history of the Community is the history of the pooling of policies previously attributed exclusively to nation states ; so the same may well happen to foreign and security policy .
20 Also included were proposals for the development of a common foreign and security policy and , ultimately , common defence .
21 The provisions relating to Economic and Monetary Union take the form of amendments to the EEC Treaty and therefore form an integral part of Community law ( even if one might have doubts as to the likelihood of the factual events which would trigger the final stage ) ; on the other hand , in the context of the provisions relating to political Union , a distinction was made between those matters which constituted amendments to the existing Community treaties , and those which fell outside the scope of the Communities , notably the provisions on a Common foreign and Security policy and those on co-operation in the fields of Justice and Home Affairs .
22 Following the example of the exclusion of the political Cooperation provisions of the Single European Act from the jurisdiction of the European Court , Article L of the Maastricht Treaty similarly defines the provisions of that treaty subject to the jurisdiction of the Court in such a way as to exclude those on Foreign and Security policy and those on Home Affairs and Justice ( with one minor exception ) .
23 Title V provides for a Common Foreign and Security policy .
24 FOREIGN AND SECURITY POLICY
25 The provisions for a common foreign and security policy come in Title V of the Maastricht Treaty .
26 Article J.1 of that Title declares : ‘ The Union and its Member States shall define and implement a common foreign and security policy , governed by the provisions of this Title and covering all areas of foreign and security policy . ’
27 Article J.1 of that Title declares : ‘ The Union and its Member States shall define and implement a common foreign and security policy , governed by the provisions of this Title and covering all areas of foreign and security policy . ’
28 And Article J.4 says : ‘ The common foreign and security policy shall include all questions related to the security of the Union , including the eventual framing of a common defence policy . ’
29 Lest there be any doubts about this , consider the Maastricht Declaration on Voting in the Field of the Common Foreign and Security Policy : ‘ The Conference agrees that , with regard to Council decisions requiring unanimity , Member States will , to the extent possible , avoid preventing a unanimous decision where a qualified majority exists in favour of that decision . ’
30 Interestingly , this was not included in the main section of the Treaty dealing with foreign and security policy but was tacked innocuously on to the end .
  Next page