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Last week the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the resolution of ratification for the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (“New START), sending it to the entire Senate, where under Article II ...
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In response to this post Ben and I put up earlier regarding the Graham bill’s detention provision, Steve Vladeck has written a reply and given me permission to post it below. My comments follow after:
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In my post on Friday on the Salahi oral argument, I pointed out that counsel for the detainee had erred in not bringing to the court's attention an important sentence from the district court's underlying...
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It isn't every day that someone sends me a 5,700 word critique of, well, my own work and asks me to publish it. But today, David Remes, who represents a number of Guantanamo clients, sent me a document e...
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DOJ’s IG has issued a report exonerating the FBI from charges that it targeted domestic groups (and one individual) for investigation based on their First Amendment activities.
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[A jointly-written post by Bobby Chesney and Benjamin Wittes]
Does the substantive scope of detention authority conferred by the Graham bill (S. 3037) “dramatically expand existing law,” as Steve Vladec...
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The Second Circuit’s holding in Kiobel that plaintiffs cannot sue corporations under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) will, I predict, eventually be embraced by the Supreme Court. But that will not end ATS ...
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For those readers who have, or plan to get, Kindles, Lawfare is now available for Kindle subscription by clicking here. While we don't take commments on this blog, Amazon does take reviews, so feel free ...
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Steve Vladeck responds to Peter Margulies' latest comments on S. 3707:
At the outset, it’s worth emphasizing that my concerns with S.
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Peter Margulies, author of Law’s Detour: Justice Displaced in the Bush Administration, who previously offered these comments and these comments on S. 3707, weighs in on the bill’s mandatory stays to habe...
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Just a brief follow-up on my earlier complaints about the "scorecard" approach to detainee litigation coverage.
In this post from ten days back, I argued that--among its other problems--the press's tend...
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I tried to take good notes at the Salahi oral argument this morning. The following is a crude summary of the argument, the transcript of which I will post when it becomes available. Bottom line: Expect a...
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In an earlier post I noted that the defense in the Ghailani prosecution (involving a former GTMO detainee now on trial in New York in connection with the 1998 East Africa embassy bombings) seeks to preve...
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A few days ago I argued that the Obama administration’s eschewal of the Bush administration Article II argument in its detention litigation was not as big a deal as it seemed. Now I want to explain why ...
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Kevin Jon Heller asks in response to my post the other night:
1. Politics aside, does the Obama administration have the legal right to kill an American citizen allegedly associated with Al-Qaeda who is l...
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Don't miss this very interesting story from Charlie Savage on the argument going on within the administration concerning how to respond to the Al Aulaqi lawsuit. The story, which quotes both of my co-blo...
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Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly has denied a habeas petition from Guantanamo detainee Fayiz Mohammed Ahmed Al Kandari (ISN 552). The opinion is not yet available. The public record of Al Kandari's CSRT and ...
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Post-game analysis of the Ninth Circuit's en banc decision in Mohamed v.
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I posted earlier a summary by Larkin Reynolds of the coming argument in Salahi v. Obama--which the D.C. Circuit is hearing on Friday. I also posted the briefs. I think this case is a big deal, one that s...
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That is the title of General Charles Dunlap’s latest reflections on lawfare. The abstract:
Few concepts in international law are more controversial than lawfare. This essay contends that lawfare is best...