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Discover LudwigThe phrase "stateless enemies" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when you wish to refer to a group of people who have no legal status in any country, such as refugees or people without citizenship. For example, "The nation's leaders have failed to protect the rights of its stateless enemies who have nowhere else to go."
Exact(4)
Mr. Keller writes: Fear of nuclear weapons spiked for a time after 9/11, when we confronted the possibility of fissile material in the hands of stateless enemies, and you can find a reservoir of existential fear today in Israel, as it contemplates a nuclear Iran.
American officials secured commitments from the meeting's other attendees to limit international trade in portable missiles, but it is the widespread presence of these weapons on the global black market -- and in the hands of stateless enemies -- that may one day force hard questions over what to do about them.
We create dysfunctional governments, failed states, and stateless enemies.
Sam Brannen, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Associated Press that Bush's analogy between World War II and today is "patently false," because the stateless enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq "are not accountable to the same command-and-control structures that existed in Japan and Germany".
Similar(52)
He said that authority was not limited to battlefields in Afghanistan, because the nation faced a threat of terrorism from "a stateless enemy, prone to shifting operations from country to country".
A key aspect of any investigation would be whether strikes are taking place within a theatre of war such as Afghanistan or on sovereign territories outside the conflict zone despite US assertions that they are conducting a global war against a stateless enemy.
That authority is "not limited to the battlefields in Afghanistan," Holder said, adding that, "We are at war with a stateless enemy, prone to shifting operations from country to country".
In a statement launching the probe, he characterized the U.S. defense of its use of drones and targeted killings in other countries as "Western democracies… engaged in a global [war] against a stateless enemy, without geographical boundaries to the theatre of conflict, and without limit of time".
Other threatening enemies are stateless, with no Taliban bobsledders or Qaeda biathletes to spur our nationalistic fervor.
Protecting and defending have always been the national executive's primary responsibility, especially now when the enemy is stateless and invisible, with the power to use weapons of boundless destruction.
It's different because of the predominantly stateless, decentralized nature of the enemy, whose only columns are fifth columns, and because of the nature of the battlefront, which shifts week by week, minute by minute, from New York and London and Madrid to Bali and Tel Aviv and Baghdad.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com