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Filling the Security Void of the Budapest Memorandum
The failure of the agreement to provide Ukraine with security guarantees should be remedied as part of ceasefire negotiations. -
The German Election and the Future of U.S.-European Relations
The prospective chancellor wants to invest in European security but will have to overcome legislative opposition. -
Lawfare Daily: Trump’s Tariffs and the Law
What legal authority does President Trump have to impose tariffs? -
Skirting Judicial Scrutiny by Mooting and Scooting
We rely on providers to resist improper surveillance. The Justice Department uses a “moot and scoot” tactic to hobble this protection. -
Office Providing Relief to Fired Federal Employees Is Under Threat
Trump’s attempts to fire Office of Special Counsel head Hampton Dellinger threaten a crucial guardrail in the civil service system. -
Rational Security: The “Leftover Chicken Kyiv” Edition
Scott Anderson, Benjamin Wittes, Natalie Orpett, and Anastasiia Lapatina discussed the week’s big national security news. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, Feb. 28
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
White House Investigations: A Proposal for a New Approach
Mechanisms for investigating the White House have proven inadequate and have been undermined by partisanship and Trump v. United States. -
Lawfare Daily: The Fate of Ukraine
Listen to the Feb. 25 live event. -
ChinaTalk: Chokepoints: American Power in the Age of Economic Warfare
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TechTank: How Black Tech Founders Are Advancing Innovation
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Who Is Running the U.S. DOGE Service?
At a recent hearing, no one—not even the Trump administration’s own lawyers—seemed to know. -
District Court Judge Rules FISA 702 Queries Required Warrant
The ruling may encourage inclusion of a warrant requirement for U.S. person queries in next year’s Section 702 reauthorization. -
There Is No Puzzle About Birthright Citizenship
Barnett and Wurman invoke a nonexistent “puzzle” about the law of nations to justify their theory about birthright citizenship. -
The Dangers Lurking in the U.K.’s Plan for Electronic Eavesdropping
Were Apple to accede to the U.K. government’s requirements, we would all be less secure. -
Lawfare Daily: Alexandra Reeve Givens, Courtney Lang, and Nema Milaninia on the Paris AI Summit and the Pivot to AI Security
What happened during the Paris AI Summit? -
The Situation: Introducing Escalation
Lawfare's new podcast series about three decades of U.S.-Ukrainian relations. -
All’s Well That Ends Well? Legal Complications of a Russia-Ukraine Ceasefire
The vernacular of “peace” and “end” is certainly appealing, but is it accurate? -
Temporary Blocks: What You Need to Know About TROs and Preliminary Injunctions
An explanation of two key legal concepts at the center of litigation challenging Trump executive orders. -
Escalation: Chicken Kyiv
Listen to the first episode of Escalation, a narrative podcast on U.S.-Ukraine relations.
More Articles
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The Grand Jury Strikes Back
In rejecting indictments that overcharge, grand juries are returning to their constitutional mission of preventing government overreach. -
Justice Dept. OIG Releases Report on Ex-FBI Agent’s Alleged Misconduct
New details emerge on Charles McGonigal, who, according to the report, tipped off a Chinese company at the center of a 2017 FBI investigation. -
Anthropic’s Settlement Shows the U.S. Can’t Afford AI Copyright Lawsuits
Copyright plaintiffs are squeezing enormous sums from AI companies. That's bad for the US and great for China. It's time for President Trump to invoke the Defense Production Act and resolve the crisis.