To some extent, this is already happening, if only because there are not enough Western soldiers.
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Authors are peculiar creatures if only because their work requires them to lie so frequently.
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Sobotka is cutting a higher profile now, if only because Entergy-Koch's rivals have fallen so far.
Sobotka has a higher profile now, if only because Entergy-Koch's rivals have fallen so far.
Time will probably resolve the patent question, if only because patents have a limited lifespan.
This comparison is certainly curious, if only because Davis is the opposite of an astronaut.
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Mr Powell's trip mattered, if only because (like most administration members) he travels so rarely.
This shift is unlikely to be reversed, if only because few people today want to be accountants.
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Some coffee shops say they still welcome laptop users, if only because they make the stores look busy.
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Then again, the study just might cause some confusion, if only because the topic continues to invite scrutiny.
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This is a pipe-dream, if only because NATO's membership includes such non-EU countries as Canada, Norway and Turkey.
Maybe, if only because it has less to do with civility than survival.
But the downturn is still hard to pin on them, if only because they were contributing so little already.
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DNA, if only because it is the more chemically stable of the two.
Importantly, a leading middle-of-the-road commentator, Dan Margalit, has told the prime minister to quit, if only because of his stonewalling.
Meanwhile, smaller companies are assiduously taking steps to avoid proxy fights if only because they can ill afford the cost.
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Nevertheless, he soon grew fond of the building, if only because he was able to tear down several room dividers.
Still, ETNs may never eclipse ETFs in popularity, if only because most investors still want to own the underlying securities.
Perhaps, if only because it can kick-start the flagging economy in a way that shovelling cash at inefficient SOEs cannot.
Blondy was a part of the family if only because at the moment anyone, even a passing stranger, would have been.
Investors probably have no option but to ride the wave, if only because the outlook for developed markets looks so flat.
The stakes are higher for the government, if only because its plan will be the one that is tested by reality.
And yet, on this day, he found himself a bit out of his element, if only because he was in the sunlight.
An immigration overhaul looks more promising, if only because Republicans recognize they risk disappointing millions of Hispanic voters by blocking a bill.
So far, GOP leaders in the House and Senate have said they'll support it, if only because, they say, there's no choice.
This will not put an end to the pursuit, however, if only because it is not only Germans who are being pursued.
Snyder was intrigued, if only because the molecule was a biological oddity.
He was interested, if only because the molecule was a biological oddity.
They will probably fail, if only because of the huge number of visitors and the determination of some to make a statement.
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There is every chance he'll play against type Friday, if only because Federer can play more varieties of tennis than anyone else.
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