-
R.I.P. Chicago Protester Prosecution (2025-2026)
How a felony case against the “Broadview Six” dwindled to a misdemeanor charge against the “Broadview Four”—and then suddenly died. -
Scaling Laws: The Politics of Data Centers with VA Delegate John McAuliff
-
The Anti-Weaponization Fund and the History of Abusive Federal Settlements
The Anti-weaponization fund may be just the latest misuse of Justice Department settlement authority, but it still has distinctive legal flaws. -
Politicians to Ditch Signal for Homegrown Apps
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Lawfare Daily: Trump Sues Self, Settles
How Trump settled against his own administration to create a $1.776 billion fund for victims of "lawfare" and "weaponization" -
Has Russia Overplayed Its Hand in UN Cyber Negotiations?
Russia is winning UN cyber governance—procedurally. Democracies must start leading on a new, positive agenda or lose the game entirely. -
Lawfare No Bull: Anthropic v. Hegseth and DOD at the D.C. Circuit
-
Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, May 22
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Rational Security: The “No Banner is Safe” Edition
Scott Anderson, Benjamin Wittes, and Kari Heerman discussed the week’s big national security news stories. -
Former Cuban President Raúl Castro Indicted
The indictment accuses Castro of ordering the shootdown of two civilian-flown planes in 1996, killing four U.S. nationals. -
Pressure Without Pause: Iraq’s Role in the Postwar Iran Settlement
Operation Epic Fury has ended; the Iraqi front of the Iran war has not. U.S. pressure on Tehran’s militia infrastructure in Iraq must hold. -
Lawfare Daily: Ancient China and Modern Politics
Unpacking ancient Chinese political theory's influence on modern China -
The President Who Sued Himself
The Trump administration settles Trump’s lawsuit against the IRS with $1.776 billion for his allies and blanket immunity from government suits for the Trumps. -
Advice and Consent for Major Governmental AI Deployments
Before the executive branch deploys advanced AI systems in its most abuse-prone functions, it should receive congressional approval. -
Lawfare Daily: ‘The Warhead’ with Jeffery Stern
How has precision weaponry changed warfare? -
The AI Race Isn’t Real
Why the “AI race” with China isn’t a race and isn’t worth running. -
Scaling Laws: Let's Do the Science! Talking Algorithms with Cathy O'Neill
-
The Deal Washington Cannot Broker
Washington has no unilateral answer for Russia’s demand to dissolve the legal record of aggression—Ukraine’s most durable leverage. -
Lawfare Daily: The Costs (and Cultural Cachet) of the Cambridge Spies
Antonia Senior discusses her hew book on the history of the Cambridge spy ring. -
How Much Power Does the EU AI Office Actually Have?
The EU AI Office gets real enforcement powers in August. Here’s what it can actually do.
More Articles
-
Tulsi Gabbard’s Fauci Files Don’t Prove What She Says They Prove
Gabbard’s declassification theater is a case study in politicizing intelligence. -
White House Releases Executive Orders on Quantum Computing
The orders direct federal agencies to prepare to defend against cryptographic attacks and contribute to U.S. quantum computing innovation. -
The Counter-UAS Certification Bottleneck
While recent amendments to 6 U.S.C. § 124n permit state and local authorities to address drone threats, a critical restraint remains.
