But to outmaneuver tyrants, many need training in the strategies of nonviolent action as well as better information technology. |
|
As a fox is able to recognize traps, a prince must be able to outmaneuver his foes. |
|
He could easily outmaneuver the Russians and use tactics to cross the T twice, inflicting maximum damage on the slower Russian fleet. |
|
She still had enough speed and agility to outmaneuver the more powerful attacks directed at her. |
|
Oh sure, there are some inconsistencies, like the bloated city slicker being able to consistently outmaneuver the seasoned swamp folk. |
|
One would seek to undercut or outmaneuver countervailing coalitions, a latter-day British grand strategy, so to speak. |
|
A boxing match is like a chess game, with fighters trying to outwit and outmaneuver their opponent to deliver the knockout blow. |
|
The Navy specified they wanted a fighter that could greatly outclimb and outmaneuver the Hellcat while being capable of operation from the smallest of aircraft carriers. |
|
In an attempt to outmaneuver the parliament, Yeltsin convened a constitutional assembly in June. |
|
Organizations of all types rely on IBM SPSS Statistics to increase revenue, outmaneuver competitors, conduct research and make better decisions. |
|
Play with one ship each, hunting each other through space in an attempt to outmaneuver and out-think your enemies. |
|
In concert with other world leaders, Reagan managed to outmaneuver the Soviet empire, leaving it to collapse, fiscally and morally. |
|
Speed gives a great deal of versatility to a unit, allowing the player to respond quickly, choose when and where they want to fight, and generally outmaneuver an opponent. |
|
It remains to be seen if a new president will be able to outmaneuver them. |
|
Deportation or the failure to get a visa is seen as a temporary setback during which strategies to outmaneuver consular officers, who are perceived as racists, are elaborated. |
|
But that means he will have to outmaneuver a president determined to avenge the shellacking that handed Boehner the gavel. |
|
Certain cancer cells can outmaneuver an immune response by growing so rapidly or becoming such a dense mass that immune cells cannot come in contact with most of them. |
|
In the game, drivers take their pick from a variety of cars, each equipped with a selection of weaponry designed to help them outmaneuver the competition. |
|
They usually try to stay away from the center of the ring, in order to outmaneuver and chip away at their opponents. |
|
Regrouping their specific expertise, these companies are in a position to outmaneuver their larger competitors by providing optimized solutions at competitive prices. |
|
|
As he gained political ascendancy he earned the bitter enmity of James Graham, 5th Earl of Montrose, leader of the Scottish Royalists, whom Campbell consistently managed to outmaneuver. |
|
Finally, hoping to outmaneuver Zaghlūl and to build up a group of pro-British politicians in Egypt, Allenby pressed his government to promise independence without previously securing British interests by a treaty. |
|
With all eyes on the economy, smart enterprises will have to make the most of technology to outmaneuver the competition and navigate the shoals of a challenging marketplace. |
|
A key to success in this stage is to outmaneuver the U. S. in diplomatic and psychological warfare and isolate the Americans, bringing home to them that there is little left but to accept the North Korean demand. |
|
The Mach-3 missile proved virtually impossible to outmaneuver, forcing the fighters to descend below effective radar coverage, where antiaircraft guns such as the ZSU 23-4 mobile system were particularly lethal. |
|
The business pages of the morning paper offer continuous news of novel ploys and counter-ploys of paper entreprenuers seeking to outmaneuver one another. |
|