Just in time for your weekend entertainment, NSL Podcast is back with a new episode. This time the show was recorded live before a (Zoom-based) audience of Texas Law alumni, which made for a nice…
Episode 121: The Persian Gulf of Tonkin
- May 15, 2019
- Tagged as: 2001 AUMF, 2002 AUMF, admiralty, al Qaeda, armed conflict, Article 51, Article II, AUMF, Classified Information, CMCR, collective self-defense, conflict of interest, Daniel Hale, FARA, foreign agent registration, Game of Thrones, Gulf of Tonkin, harboring, hostilities, Huawei, Iran, James Cole, Jeremy Scahill, Julian Assange, leak prosecution, Leaks, Military Commissions, national defense information, National Security Law, North Korea, propaganda, sanctions, SCOTUS, self defense, Sputnik, The Intercept, UN Charter, War Powers, War Powers Resolution, wikileaks, WPR
In this week’s episode, Steve Vladeck and Bobby Chesney debate and discuss the latest national security legal news, including: Iran – The prospect of some form of armed conflict with Iran, and the various legal…
Episode 25: So Much National Security Law News…We’ve Reached Our Limitrophe
- June 28, 2017
- Tagged as: Aburakhmon Uzbeki, AQI, Bivens, Black Sites, Chris Paul, civil liability, Convening Authority, Establishment Clause, ETF, executive order, Expeditionary Targeting Force, extraterritorial, FARA, foreign agent registration, Fourth Amendment, GTMO, Guantanamo, Hambali, Harvey Rishikoff, Hernandez v. Mesa, Indiana Jones, Iran, Iraq, IS, ISIL, ISIS, Islamic State, Justice Breyer, limitrophe, material support, Military Commissions, Paul Manafort, qualified immunity, SCOTUS, SOF, Syria, Travel Ban, Trump, Trump v. IRAP, UAE, Yemen
Had you seen the word “limitrophe” before Justice Breyer used it in his dissent in Herndandez v. Mesa? Neither had Professors Vladeck and Chesney, but that doesn’t stop them from exploring the Supreme Court’s action in…