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U.S. House Investigations v. White House Slow-Walk: Scenarios

Democrats in the U.S. House are preparing to wield their new majority power in January. While they lack the control of both chambers necessary to push through legislation, they…

The Votes Are There for a Congressional Reckoning on Yemen

Democratic control of the House opens the door to real action and accountability for U.S. policy in Yemen next year.

A Congressional Cybersecurity To-Do List

With a lame duck session pending, Congress may address a number of cybersecurity and data security issues before the end of the calendar year. Since it passed the “Cybersecurity…

Conference Roundup: National Security and Shifting Geopolitics – Challenges at Home and Abroad

Leading scholars, senior policymakers and award-winning journalists discussed key national security challenges of our era in a daylong conference Oct. 22, 2018, hosted by the Reiss…

From Brunson to Khashoggi, Global Magnitsky Sanctions Score a Mixed Record of Firsts

In the last 30 days, we’ve witnessed a number of important firsts concerning Global Magnitsky sanctions, the targeted pro-human rights and anti-corruption penalties increasingly…

Election Security is an Immediate National Security Concern

Democracy isn’t in the casting of the votes -- it’s in the counting. Georgia State Rep. Scott Holcomb says we need to ensure that our system is secure and every ballot is counted…

How Dangerous—and How New—Is the Defense Department’s “Collective Self-Defense” Theory?

The Defense Department’s reliance on a broad interpretation of “collective self-defense” appears to authorize military operations further removed from congressional approval…

Letter to the Editor: How About Some Regulation of the Mercenary Industry?

Following Sarah Knuckey and Ryan Goodman’s post on U.S. mercenaries in Yemen, I’d like to provide a bit of international legal background to the urgent discussion of whether…

Why Support for U.N.-backed Anti-Corruption Commission in Guatemala is Vital to U.S. Interests

The ongoing constitutional crisis in Guatemala underscores concerns that corruption continues to permeate high levels of the government.

Post-9/11 Generation Reaches Enlistment Age in Unmoored ‘War on Terror’

Human Rights First International Legal Counsel Rita Siemion says it's long past time to ensure that war-based authorities are used only when specifically authorized by Congress…

Condolence Payments for Civilian Casualties: Lessons for Applying the New NDAA

The new National Defense Authorization Act can help improve the way the U.S. responds to civilian casualties. FOIA requests and interviews with DoD officials, U.S. soldiers, judge…

Brett Kavanaugh and the Risk of a Return to Torture

Brett Kavanaugh, holds a stark view of the role of international law, which could threaten the protection of fundamental human rights, including the right not to be tortured.
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