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Word: nationalist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...automatically to an appeals court, where it is expected to be upheld. Then it?s up to parliament and the president to sign off on the hanging ?- and although Turkey hasn?t executed anyone in 15 years, the clamor for Ocalan?s head may prove irresistible. The brutal Kurdish-nationalist insurgency led by Ocalan and the ferocious Turkish government repression it occasioned has claimed as many as 30,000 lives, all of which the government blames on Ocalan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turkey Faces Furor Over Ocalan Death Sentence | 6/29/1999 | See Source »

Simply following its own instincts would in all likelihood lead Turkey?s strongly nationalist parliament to give Ocalan the rope. But pressure against executing Ocalan will come from Turkey?s NATO allies, particularly in Europe. While Western governments don?t doubt the viciousness of Ocalan?s insurgency, they tend to put it in the context of Turkey?s denial of the cultural and language rights of its Kurdish population: Turkey treats any assertion of a distinct Kurdish identity as a threat to the integrity of the state. This has allowed Ocalan, during his trial, to cloak himself in the mantle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turkey Faces Furor Over Ocalan Death Sentence | 6/29/1999 | See Source »

Giving up its symbols is just about the hardest thing for a nationalist movement to do, and the quintessential symbol of Irish republicanism is the assault rifle. That is at the heart of the tricky situation facing British and Irish leaders, who, with a Wednesday deadline looming, on Tuesday entered a second day of make-or-break crisis talks on Northern Ireland?s future. "We?ve got to know that the gun will be taken out of Northern Irish politics," said Britain?s Prime Minister Tony Blair. "People will neither understand nor forgive if we don?t make this thing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Like America, N. Ireland Argues About Guns | 6/29/1999 | See Source »

...Rambouillet hadn?t reckoned with the deep historical attachment to Kosovo across the political spectrum in Serbia. It would have been difficult for any politician to concede to NATO?s demands, let alone for Milosevic, who?d built his nationalist credentials on the promise to protect Kosovo?s Serbs, and whose officer corps was even more nationalist than he. Moreover, the Dayton analogy may have been stretched, in the sense that Dayton came after a three-year ground war that had left both sides exhausted. The Serbs called NATO?s bluff, leaving the alliance compelled to respond forcefully...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Did the President Put Pollyanna in Charge of U.S. Kosovo Policy? | 6/14/1999 | See Source »

...While it?s too early for NATO to plan a ticker-tape parade, Milosevic, personally, has no cause to break out the Mo?t. His nationalist allies have deserted him over his surrender of Kosovo; his more liberal opponents will attack him for pointlessly subjecting the country to a 78-day bombing nightmare; he?s now wanted in the Hague to face war crimes charges; and the U.S. and Britain are warning his countrymen they?ll get no help rebuilding their shattered country while he?s still in power. (The latter condition may well be quietly dropped as Europe balks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who's Won When Both Sides Are Cheering? | 6/11/1999 | See Source »

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