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Congress Needs to Amend the War Crimes Act of 1996
Congress needs to immediately amend the War Crimes Act to align federal criminal jurisdiction over war crimes with the international law concept of universal jurisdiction. -
ChinaTalk: Emergency Pod: Tooze and Klein on Nuclear War, The EU's Future, and What's Next
Adam Tooze and Matt Klein return to ChinaTalk to discuss the war in Ukraine. -
ChinaTalk: Emergency Pod: The View From Prague + Future of the EU
The latest episode of ChinaTalk featuring Ivana Karásková, China research fellow and a project coordinator at the Association for International Affairs. -
ChinaTalk: Emergency Pod: What's Driving Putin, Sanctions, Drugs, Echoes from History, Xi, Chips
The latest episode of ChinaTalk featuring Chris Miller of Tufts. -
ChinaTalk: Emergency Pod: Russia and Cyber Operations
The latest episode of ChinaTalk featuring Justin Sherman of the Atlantic Council. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Rational Security 2.0: The ‘War in Ukraine’ Special Edition
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The Lawfare Podcast: Dan Solove and Woody Hartzog on ‘Breached!’
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Foreign Fighters in Ukraine? Evaluating the Benefits and Risks
The war today differs from jihadists conflicts and even the more limited recent civil conflict in Ukraine, but these and other experiences offer some lessons to consider about any future role for foreign... -
Cyber Realism in a Time of War
Activity in the digital domain may affect the war in Eastern Europe at the margins, but it will not decide it. That should tell us something about the West’s cyber posture. -
The Modern History of Economic Sanctions
A review of Nicholas Mulder, “The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War” (Yale University Press, 2022). -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Making Sense of the Unprecedented Sanctions on Russia
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The Cyberlaw Podcast: Waging War in a Networked Age
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How the U.K. and the Senate Judiciary Committee Are Being Dangerously Foolish About Cryptography
In an attempt to prevent the online circulation of child sexual abuse material, a reintroduced Senate bill runs the risk of failing to combat the problem while simultaneously decreasing internet security. -
Putin’s Memory Laws Set the Stage for His War in Ukraine
Vladimir Putin’s rewriting of the history of World War II set the stage for his war in Ukraine. -
Lawfare Live: Expert Panel On Ukraine
Join us this Friday, March 4, at 3:30 p.m. EST for a live recording of the Lawfare Podcast where we will talk about the situation in Ukraine with an expert panel. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
The Lawfare Podcast: China’s Illicit Economies
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The Division of Authority Between the Special Trial Counsel and Commanders Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice: Planning Now for the Next Phase of Reform
In late 2021, Congress reformed the military justice system in a way that materially alters the traditional division of prosecutorial responsibility between nonlawyer military commanders and uniformed la...
More Articles
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The Serious but Not Literal Blockade
The U.S. has implemented a lawful blockade despite President Trump’s initial comment that the blockade would be total and, thus, unlawful. -
El Niño Will Supercharge Shocks Like the Iran War
The event will amplify the effects of conflict, highlighting the importance of climate resilience to global security. -
Scaling Laws: AI as Abnormal Technology? Scott Sullivan Analyzes AI in the Military Domain
