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Despite the widespread citation of the Cuban missile crisis as the archetype of a president utilizing Article II authority to meet a danger unilaterally, Kennedy’s actions in the 1962 crisis were formall...
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Thanks to advances in digital technologies, it is now easier than ever for civilians to get involved in military cyber operations.
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Just about any conceivable use of force in the Middle East can be justified under an Article II self-defense theory. Which means that a lot rests on the president’s, and his subordinates’, prudence.
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Their performance in response to last week’s Gaza hospital explosion was far worse than that of the New York Times.
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Experience is refining the Defense Department’s approaches to key issues like cyber campaigning, escalation, and public-private relations in cybersecurity
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This week, Alan, Quinta, and Scott were joined by their Lawfare colleague and Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Senior Fellow Eric Ciaramella to discuss the week’s big national security news.
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While law restrains Israel in some ways, it does not prevent an Israeli response to Hamas that will morally discomfit not only those who hate it but many of its friends as well.
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The ICC opened an ongoing investigation into the situation in Palestine in 2021. How might the current conflict affect the investigation, and vice versa?
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Yes, all of them, and most of the United States’ other Cold War equipment, too.
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Israel’s objectives will be difficult to achieve. The United States should be ready to support its efforts.
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The Supreme Court has set up a problem ripe with pitfalls for the government to navigate in Students for Fair Admissions v. West Point.
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Many are comparing the current conflict to 9/11. What are the differences, and what are the dangers of such a comparison?