In the aftermath of war, we cared for survivors and we helped reunite families.
But how did the arch-moralist of the Kosovo war become the West's arch-pragmatist in the aftermath of the Chechen war?
That brought the loss of jobs since the recession officially began in December 2007 to 2.6m, the largest 12-month drop in absolute terms since the aftermath of the war.
The Center for Security Policy believes that particularly in the aftermath of the war with Iraq (and its attendant lessons about the growing danger of ballistic missile proliferation) the U.S. government must reject once and for all the contortionist logic of Harold Brown and other proponents of the ABM Treaty.
IWPR, or the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, was set up in 1991 in the aftermath of the Gulf War and now covers the Balkans and under-reported regions of the Caucasus and Central Asia.
The tribunal was the first international body for the prosecution of war crimes since the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials held in the aftermath of World War II.
The film tells of a disturbed US seaman who falls under the spell of an enigmatic cult leader in the aftermath of World War II.
But Mr Blair is not the only pro-war leader whose support is slipping: Mr Bush, too, is feeling some heat in the aftermath of the Iraq war.
One can understand the moral seriousness of the architects of Israel in the immediate aftermath of the second world war.
We also get the sequel, in the aftermath of World War I, in the form of kinky, carefully wrought "New Objectivity" paintings from the 1920s.
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Congress adopted the War Powers Resolution (1973) in the aftermath of the undeclared Vietnam War.
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In the Middle East, Chance reported extensively from Iraq in the aftermath of the 2003 war.
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Turkey has been as central to the U.S.-led effort to contain Saddam Hussein in the aftermath of the Gulf War as it was to the effort to expel his forces from Kuwait.
" He asserts that "the context of the sentence as written was the late 1940s, in the immediate aftermath of World War II, not the entire Cold War, as strongly implied in letters and memorandums circulated in the Senate.
The aftermath of the war has left plenty for the coalition partners to disagree about.
In the aftermath of the war, the British maintained their prohibition on Jewish immigration.
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And in the aftermath of that war, the government lost its moral right to send its forces into battle.
In the aftermath of World War II, international finances were tied to the US dollar, which was backed by gold.
The aftermath of the war will be particularly painful for Eritrea, which has now taken on all its neighbours, achieving nothing.
Or were they reacting to the very real, and very substantive, increase in Soviet power in the aftermath of the Second World War?
In the intermediate aftermath of the Cold War it was commonly assumed that the world's remaining dictators would soon be swept away, too.
Polish film director Andrzej Wajda was given an Honorary Oscar for his four decades' work in films set in the aftermath of World War II.
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As a result, the aftermath of the war was much more chaotic than it would have been if experienced experts had been more involved in the planning process.
Mbarushimana left Rwanda in the aftermath of the war and worked for the United Nations until he was dismissed in 2001 when it was revealed that he was the subject of an investigation by the United Nations' own criminal tribunal for Rwanda.
Magnum Photos was brought to life in the aftermath of World War II by photographers Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, George Rodger and David "Chim" Seymour, each of whom was well acquainted with covering a changing world, where borders and allegiances were shifting as players set themselves for what was to become the Cold War.
Similarly, the number of bases - and, therefore, host communities - supporting the U.S. armed forces has been cut dramatically from what it was in the immediate aftermath of World War II and the Korea conflict.
In the violent aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, a defiantly imaginative girl, Ofelia, recoils from her harsh life her stepfather is a Fascist captain who tortures dissidents and descends into a ravishing underworld of sprites and satyrs.
Modern conflicts have helped cripple Sidon's economy: It is the western terminus of a 780-mile-long oil pipeline from Saudi Arabia built in 1950 by the predecessors of ExxonMobil and Chevron but shut down in the aftermath of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.
Mr Harrison points out that the base defence budget has not been 4% of GDP since 1992, in the aftermath of the cold war.
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