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Addressing risks posed by Beijing’s accessing Americans’ data requires first conceptualizing the trade offs in current U.S. policy approaches.
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The NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, just wrapped up, and the big news is that Sweden is in, and Ukraine is not.
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Texas’s and Louisiana’s claimed injuries are not “cognizable” due to a tradition of deference to the executive’s prosecutorial discretion.
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The department argued that the trial date should remain set for December 2023.
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This week, Alan Rozenshtein, Quinta Jurecic, and Scott Anderson were joined by Ravi Agrawal, Editor in Chief of Foreign Policy Magazine, to talk through the week’s big national security news.
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The implementation plan is a roadmap to accomplishing the objectives announced in March.
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The report pulls no punches in describing the failures of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security in advance of the insurrection.
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The government and defense agree it’s illegal to use torture-obtained evidence. In Nurjaman, military commissions authorized it anyway.
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What is the status of the investigations into and prosecutions against former President Donald Trump?
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The second class of Lawfare's cybersecurity and hacking course is now available to the public.
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If the Saudis want to play golf, they must look for models outside of sports.