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The absence of a warrant requirement in the new bill will stoke lingering divisions.
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Requiring the FBI to get a court order before it looks at its own legally acquired information is not just unnecessary—it’s also dangerous to our national security.
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Despite uncovering evidence that Biden “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials,” Hur did not conclude it “established Biden’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
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State-backed disinformation campaigns are increasingly fueled by artificial intelligence and other new digital technologies, but still grounded in tried-and-true methods and tradecraft.
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A review of Amy B. Zegart, “Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: the History and Future of American Intelligence” (Princeton University Press, 2022)
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The issues—and Lawfare coverage—that kept our editors up at night in 2023.
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What is the history of the Espionage Act?
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A review of Liza Mundy, “The Sisterhood: The Secret History of Women of the CIA” (Crown, 2023)
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The reports found that China and Russia employed information operations to interfere in the elections—albeit unsuccessfully.
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A new paper series led by the University of Texas’s Robert Strauss Center examines the surveillance laws, institutions, and safeguards of 10 rule-of-law democracies.
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U.S. arms transfers to Israel have come under fire since Oct. 7. But another crucial aspect of U.S. security assistance to Israel—intelligence sharing—has mostly escaped criticism, despite its significan...