- 
                    
    The President Tweets and the Justice Department Complies
The Justice Department’s handling of the sentencing of Roger Stone and Michael Flynn gives reason to worry about how Attorney General Barr will handle allegations against the Biden family. - 
                    
    Prosecutors Amend Roger Stone Sentencing Recommendation
 - 
                    
    The EARN IT Act Raises Good Questions About End-to-End Encryption
Critics are right that the draft legislation from Sens. Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal could affect the deployment of end-to-end encryption. But the bill makes sense as social policy. - 
                    
    What Exactly Do the New PLA Indictments Accomplish?
The Department of Justice has announced indictments of four Chinese People’s Liberation Army service members in connection with the 2017 Equifax breach. The indictments rely on a capacious definition of ... - 
                    
    Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. - 
                    
    Federal Prosecutors Recommend Sentencing Roger Stone to Seven to Nine Years
 - 
                    
    The Lawfare Podcast: Afshon Ostovar on Iran's Revolutionary Guard
 - 
                    
    The Cyberlaw Podcast: The European Court of Justice Is About to Kick Off a Massive US-EU Trade War
 - 
                    
    The Legal Limits on Trump’s Reprisals Against Impeachment Witnesses
If the president tries to go after career civil servants, he may trigger some significant legal consequences—including renewed scrutiny of his own conduct. - 
                    
    OLC on Presidential Power, According to Trump’s Impeachment Defense
How did the Trump impeachment defense team deploy OLC memos to defend the president? - 
                    
    Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. - 
                    
    The Week That Will Be
Lawfare's weekly round-up of event announcements and employment opportunities. - 
                    
    U.S. Indicts Four Chinese Military Hackers in Equifax Breach
 - 
                    
    Trump’s Middle East Plan: What Does America Stand For?
The Trump administration has proposed a worrisome principle: The past must be ignored. - 
                    
    International Criminal Court Appeals Chamber Holds Hearings on Afghanistan
Over three days of hearings, the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber considered whether to overturn an April 2019 decision blocking investigations into alleged war crimes by the Taliban and U.... - 
                    
    Europe Needs a China Strategy; Brussels Needs to Shape It
The new president of the European Commission can help guide European policy in the right direction. - 
                    
    The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. - 
                    
    The Lawfare Podcast: Joshua Yaffa on Putin’s Russia
 - 
                    
    The Coronavirus Shows Why the U.S. Must Make Pandemic Disease a National Security Priority
In responding to the coronavirus, the U.S. should apply lessons learned from past transnational threats—but unfortunately, in important respects, the federal government is moving in the wrong direction. - 
                    
    Election Security After Iowa
The disaster of the Iowa caucuses is a vivid illustration of how public reaction to a mishap can be worse than the mishap itself. 
More Articles
- 
                    
    Lawfare Daily: How Social Media Threatens Democracy, with Rick Pildes
Discussing the link between social media and threats to democracy. - 
                    
    The European Commission’s Rejection of Latombe
The rejection leaves the DPF politically fragile, legally untested at the Court of Justice, and vulnerable to shifts in Washington. - 
                    
    Offensive Cyber Operations and Combat Effectiveness After Ukraine
Ukraine’s offensive cyber strategy demonstrates that Western governments need to adopt a “responsibly irresponsible” warfighting approach. 
