Word: expertly
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...Getting airlift helps both the E.U. and NATO," says a European diplomat at NATO. "The concepts are complementary." Others aren't quite so sure. Though the NATO force is geared for actual combat rather than the lower-intensity peacekeeping missions the E.U. envisions, says Rob de Wijk, a security expert at the Clingendael Institute in the Hague, Washington's proposal is "a clear attempt to prevent Europe from going its own way" by committing its resources to the alliance. A similar conflict surfaced last week when NATO said it would renew its mandate, due to expire Dec. 15, to command...
...week before opening night, the entire cast met with Kenan Professor of English Marjorie Garber, an expert in both Shakespeare and gender theory, to gain thematic and dramatic insight into the play...
This is going to be a parting shot. So, students want kegs of beer next weekend, the House Masters and Harvard administration have decided they are a bad idea, an expert on binge drinking has agreed that kegs would exacerbate student drinking and Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis ’68 blames it all on the beer industry...
...Islam's prescriptions for human behaviour. Babès sees Shari'a as a spiritual code of ethics appealing to each believer's individual conscience, not a strict code of conduct to be enforced by an outside authority. Oubrou argues for a more traditional interpretation, in which the expert analysis of religious texts determines the way all believers should act. For Oubrou, free interpretation of the Koran could lead to nothing less than the disappearance of recognizably Islamic values. Another crucial exchange focuses on who is qualified to interpret the Koran and the hadiths. Babès dismisses the assertion...
...London-based Al Hayat daily on Oct. 16 printed an article about a communiqué in which al-Qaeda had sent a message to the allies of Washington's war on terror: Help America and you "will not remain forever far from the revenge of the mujahedin." Some intelligence experts believe messages like these could be mere posturing. Al-Qaeda may for now be content to use Europe as a safe haven for planning attacks against U.S. interests elsewhere in the world, as Atta's Hamburg cell did. But most investigators know they can't be complacent, especially because there...