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                      The Lawfare Podcast: DHS Compiles Intelligence on Journalists … Including our Editor-In-Chief
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                      The Domestic Legal Framework for U.S. Military Cyber OperationsWith little fanfare and less public notice, Congress and the executive branch have cooperated effectively over the past decade to build a legal architecture for military cyber operations.
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                      Senate Judiciary Committee Holds Hearing on Crossfire Hurricane Investigation
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                      New Hampshire’s 2020 Elections in the Wake of the CoronavirusWhat are the pandemic-related challenges for the Granite State ahead of the November general election?
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                      Canadian Intelligence Service Broke the Law in Security Investigations, Court SaysWhat’s in the decision ruling that Canada’s intelligence service failed to disclose that information in national security warrant applications was likely illegally obtained?
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                      Today’s Headlines and CommentaryLawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion.
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                      How Might the Sleeper Agents From “The Americans” Interfere in the Election?The television show “The Americans” imagined KGB agents deployed to the U.S. undercover as regular suburbanites. If the show’s Russian operatives were in the U.S. today, what might they do in the run-up ...
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                      Trump v. Vance Moves Forward in the Lower CourtsPresident Trump filed his amended complaint and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance filed his motion to dismiss.
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                      The Lawfare Podcast: The Senate Foreign Relations Committee's Democratic Staff Report on Diplomacy in Crisis
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                      Contingency Planning for Presidential Interference with the ElectionI urge my former colleagues in the military services and at the Department of Defense level to plan now for the possibility of actions by the president to disrupt the forthcoming election or even to viti...
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                      What If J. Edgar Hoover Had Been a Moron?My adventures as an intelligence subject of the Department of Homeland Security.
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                      House Republicans' Unprecedented Lawsuit to Stop Remote VotingHouse Republicans have sued to enjoin the use of the House’s proxy voting system. Will the case break new ground?
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                      Justice Department Releases Its Review of FISA Applications Examined by Inspector General
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                      Today's Headlines and CommentaryLawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion.
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                      The U.S. Is Right to Worry About TikTokChinese companies have more independence than Americans may realize—but the potential for interference in TikTok by the Chinese government is real, and there’s little that the app’s parent company can do...
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                      The Week That Will BeLawfare's weekly round-up of event announcements and employment opportunities.
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                      The Lawfare Podcast: Michel Paradis on 'Last Mission to Tokyo'
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                      Europe's Incertitude in CyberspaceWhen the U.S. attempted to build a vocal alliance of like-minded countries in response to an indictment of Chinese hackers, European nations stayed quiet.
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                      TikTok and the Law: A Primer (In Case You Need to Explain Things to Your Teenager)TikTok is in serious trouble, and teenagers across the land are demanding answers about the legal frameworks at issue. Well, maybe they are not exactly focused on the legal issues. But in case you are, ...
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                      The Exaggerated Threat of Oil WarsCountries won’t fight for oil in the South China Sea—or anywhere else.
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                      The Unitary Artificial ExecutivePrevious expansions of presidential power were still constrained by human limitations. Artificial intelligence eliminates those constraints.
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                      Rational Security: The "Tyler's Revenge" EditionScott Anderson, Ari Tabatabai and Tyler McBrien talked through the week’s big news in national security.
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                      The Case Against Unbounded Delegation in Trump v. V.O.S. SelectionsUnlike IEEPA, all foreign affairs delegations mentioned in the Court’s canonical Curtiss-Wright decision were cabined delegations.

 
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    