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Neither the Rome Statute nor fundamental fairness evidently permitted the ICC prosecutor to instruct an external panel of legal experts he assembled to review evidence he used to support his applications...
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Can the Department of Defense innovate fast enough to maintain technological and military superiority?
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Public opinion can support the use of nuclear weapons in conflicts. Governments need stronger checks against pushing the button.
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If properly structured, both a commission of inquiry and a preliminary examination by the Israeli police could arguably meet existing complementarity standards.
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Discussing the efforts of librarians to save books during World War II.
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Revelations of Unit 8200’s failure to warn about the Oct. 7 attacks suggests that the Israeli intelligence apparatus is far weaker than its reputation.
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This week, Alan Rozenshtein, Quinta Jurecic, and Scott Anderson were joined once again by Kevin Frazier to talk over the week’s big national security news.
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Some Genocide Convention parties recognizing the State of Palestine could sue it at the ICJ for alleged genocide by Hamas on Oct. 7.
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Ongoing International Court of Justice proceedings focused on Gaza mean officials authorizing weapons transfers “should have known” about risk.
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A clever new plan would aid Ukraine today, while kicking hard decisions about seizing Russia’s foreign assets down the road—perhaps indefinitely.
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What is in the new U.S.-Ukraine security agreement?
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This week, Quinta Jurecic and Scott Anderson were joined by Lawfare Contributing Editor and Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Eric Ciaramella