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Taking the War to Hezbollah: What It Might, and Might Not, Achieve
Israel must learn from its 2006 war with Hezbollah to achieve its strategic objectives in this round of fighting. -
The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The EU Throws a Hand Grenade on Software Liability
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Open-Access AI: Lessons From Open-Source Software
Open-weight AI models aren’t the panacea for AI democratization, innovation, and accountability that their evangelists claim them to be. -
Lawfare Daily: Hunter Marston on the South China Sea
What is the geopolitical importance of the South China Sea? -
White House Releases Memo on AI and National Security
The memo, “aims to catalyze needed change in how the United States Government approaches AI national security policy.” -
In Routh Case, Government Backs Cannon—But Barely
Its six-sentence filing will likely have little impact on the prospects for reassigning Judge Cannon from Trump’s classified documents case. -
Rational Security: The “Socialist Realism at its Finest” Edition
Scott Anderson was joined by Tyler McBrien, Anna Hickey, and Dan Byman to talk over the week’s big national security news -
Emergency Powers for Good
A new theory of emergency powers finds room for transformative government action. -
Lawfare Daily: Sam Kessler on How North Korean IT Workers Infiltrate U.S. Tech Companies
What can be done about North Korean IT workers infiltrating the crypto industry? -
A New Insiders’ Account of the Mueller Investigation
A review of Aaron Zebley, James Quarles and Andrew Goldstein, “Interference: The Inside Story of Trump, Russia, and the Mueller Investigation” (Simon & Schuster, 2024) -
Lawfare Live: Trump's Trials and Tribulations, Oct. 24
Join the Lawfare team for a discussion of the trials of Donald Trump. -
How the Department of the Air Force Can Optimize Legal Support for Great Power Competition
Effective legal support is mission critical. -
Lawfare Daily: Mark Chinen on International Human Rights Law as a Framework for AI Governance
How can IHL be used for AI governance? -
Intelligence Briefing Outlines Foreign Influence Threats to U.S. Elections
The briefing suggests that China, Iran, Russia and others will seek to amplify narratives that cast doubt on election results after voting ends. -
Data Brokers and Threats to Government Employees
SEC employees aren’t the only ones who can be tracked with brokered data. Government employees across the country are at risk. -
Jan. 6 Trespasser’s Appeal Rejected by U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C. Circuit
The court ruled that, for misdemeanor federal trespass, the government need only prove that a defendant knew he was in a restricted zone. -
Lawfare Live: 2024 Election, Presidential Transition
Lawfare will host a panel discussion on Oct. 29. -
International Shocks and Regional Responses in Data Governance
Recent global crises in intelligence, health, and the military have influenced the evolution of data regulation locally and globally. -
Lawfare Daily: Recent Elections and the State of Democracy in Tunisia
Discussing the trajectory of democracy in Tunisia.
More Articles
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The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Rational Security: The “Happy FrAIday” Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with his Lawfare colleagues Kevin Frazier, Roger Parloff, and Molly Roberts to talk through some of the week’s big news in AI. -
Harsh Confinement
A review of W. Fitzhugh Brundage, “A Fate Worse Than Hell: American Prisoners of the Civil War” (Norton, 2026).
