Dictionary
quisling
noun
A traitor who collaborates with the enemy.
Exact(8)
Not surprisingly, Chechen militants regard him as a Quisling.
It could be sustained only by outside aid, military containment and a docile, quisling Palestinian leadership.
More than that, what happened during the 1990s had to be understood in the context of the real genocide of the Serbs at the hands of the quisling Croatian state during the Second World War".Unless the court has a collective aneurysm," says Marko Milanovic, an international lawyer at Nottingham University, "the outcome (of the case) is already predetermined.
In September 1940 the administrative council was replaced by a number of "commissarial counselors," who in 1942 formed a Nazi government under the leadership of Quisling.
Later, furious over his homeland's rapid submission to the Nazis (and perhaps its donation of the word "quisling" to the English vocabulary), Max and some friends encourage Norwegian resistance by distributing illegal propaganda.
The president's perception of public support has fueled the narrative that he repeated on Tuesday, that outside forces a combination of Muslim fundamentalists, Al Qaeda, Washington, Zionists and quisling Arabs — all form an anti-Syrian cabal.
It was not alone the shame of seeing the leader, the Old Man, the apotheosis of Palestinian Nationalism, Yasser Arafat, forced into the role of quisling, arresting his own activists, made to bear responsibility for outrages triggered by the aggravation of his people by military occupation.
At one point, Labour MP Barry Gardiner stood up in parliament and called him a quisling.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com