11. Local governments, too, are eager to use sanctions as an expression of their concern about the policies of foreign governments. 12. Many people point to the continuing international trade sanctions as the first problem. 13. Most European nations, including Britain, view economic sanctions as unwise and unlikely to deter India from turning its nuclear capability into weapons. 14. Milosevic sees the end of the U.N. sanctions as giving something to a public that has grown weary of nationalist oratory and bloodshed. 15. Of the different approaches, the sterner view that juveniles who commit heinous crimes should face the same sanctions as adults is clearly winning out. 16. Once China is a member, these officials can use the threat of WTO sanctions as a hammer to hasten reform. 17. Such unofficial sanctions as scorn, shame and pity might be the most meaningful punishments. 18. That plan would offer Iraq limited relief from sanctions as a reward agreeing to allow entry to weapons inspections teams. 19. The AEA, Bennett said, opposes sanctions as an instrument of foreign policy, as do most trade organizations. 20. That would prevent any president from acting on his own, as Clinton has in the past, to loosen or tighten sanctions as relations with Cuba change. |