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Nuremberg's Regrettable Sibling: The Contradictions of the Tokyo Tribunal
A review of Gary Bass, "Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia" (Knopf, 2023) -
Keeping but Reforming Special Counsel Rules: A Reply to Jack Goldsmith
Yes, there are serious problems with the special counsel rules, but it is worth trying to fix them. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Asylum-Seekers and the EU Migration Pact
How is asylum and migration law evolving globally? -
The False Promise of Nuclear Deterrence for Postwar Ukrainian Security
Postwar Ukraine should avoid tying its security to nuclear weapons—its own or NATO’s—instead ensuring its conventional forces are robust and defensively oriented. -
The Lawfare Podcast, Trump’s Trials and Tribulations: Two Weeks Until a Trial
Listen to this week's episode of Trump's Trials and Tribulations -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
It Depends Who’s Doing the Jawboning
In Murthy v. Missouri, one vital piece of context has gone unacknowledged: Different administrations operate differently. -
China Slapped for Hacking Campaign + I Feel the Need For a ... Cyber Force?
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Has New START Reached a Dead End?
Russia’s New START violations have raised the risk of breaching its central limits. The political conflict underlying them could bring about the treaty’s end. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Shannon Togawa Mercer on Negotiating with the Bad Guys
Is it legal to negotiate with and pay off foreign ransomware gangs? -
ICJ Orders Additional Provisional Measures in South Africa v. Israel
Referencing the worsening conditions and imminent famine in Gaza, the Court ordered Israel to ensure the provision of humanitarian assistance, among other measures. -
UN Security Council Adopts Gaza Ceasefire Resolution
After several failed attempts, on March 25, the United Nations Security Council adopted the first ceasefire resolution of the Israel-Hamas war since Oct. 7. -
Rational Security: The “A Terrorism Briefing from a Goldendoodle” Edition
This week, Alan Rozenshtein and Quinta Jurecic were joined by Tyler McBrien and Daniel Byman to talk over the week’s national security news, including: -
To Govern AI, We Must Govern Compute
Compute governance is a particularly important approach to AI governance because it is feasible. -
Nuclear War: A Scenario with Annie Jacobsen
How would the U.S. react to a nuclear attack? -
For Government Use of AI, What Gets Measured Gets Managed
The immaturity of the AI measurement and evaluation ecosystem is a significant roadblock to the implementation of the Biden administration’s AI procurement priorities. -
The Lawfare Podcast: How the FBI is Combating Cyberattacks, with Brett Leatherman
Discussing the cyber threat to national security -
Tech Tank: The Road Back to the Moon
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ChinaTalk: Biotech 101
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Could the Special Counsel Challenge Judge Cannon’s Jury Instructions Before They’re Delivered?
Though rarely tried, prosecutors have successfully challenged proposed jury instructions by mandamus actions—at least after the jury was sworn in.
More Articles
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Offensive Cyber Operations and Combat Effectiveness After Ukraine
Ukraine’s offensive cyber strategy demonstrates that Western governments need to adopt a “responsibly irresponsible” warfighting approach. -
Lawfare Daily: Trials of the Trump Administration, Oct. 31
Listen to the Oct. 31 livestream as a podcast. -
Why Trump’s Madman Act Doesn’t Work
The administration’s approach of “strategic uncertainty” is unlikely to produce better deals.
