September 9, 2009 # 10:50 pm # Foreign Policy, Human Rights, International Law, Supreme Court # No Comment
The American Society of International Law, the Constitution Project, and the Georgetown Center on National Security and the Law invite you to attend a special event on
Constitution Day
September 17, 2009
9:30 am – 12:30 pm
Georgetown University Law Center
McDonough Hall – Hart Auditorium
600 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Washington, DC
RSVP to rsvp@constitutionproject.org
Presentation of the Constitution Project’s 2009 Constitutional Commentary Award
Honoring Michael …
September 2, 2009 # 2:31 pm # International Law # No Comment
In case you missed it, Jurist reports:
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) [official website] announced [press release] Tuesday that a group of 91 countries have reached an agreement on the final text of the first ever treaty [text, PDF] to combat illegal fishing. The Agreement on Port State Measures to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) …
August 31, 2009 # 8:42 am # Foreign Policy, International Law # No Comment
My Georgetown colleague Dr. Timothy Beach discusses the Copenhagen global climate change negotiations. Tim is associate professor of geography and geoscience at Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service
(HT: UK in the US, UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office)
August 30, 2009 # 7:27 pm # Armed Conflict, Foreign Policy, Human Rights, Intelligence, International Law # One Comment
In today’s Washington Post, Professor Loch Johnson, former special assistant to the late Senator Frank Church, reminds us previous efforts to investigate allegations of wrong-doing in the intelligence community. Dr. Johnson writes:
During the first half of the Cold War, the CIA was largely free of serious congressional supervision. And despite controversies such as the U2 shoot-down over the Soviet Union, …
August 29, 2009 # 1:56 pm # Armed Conflict, Foreign Policy, Human Rights, Intelligence, International Law # No Comment
Numerous previous posts have discussed the possibility of civil suits against individuals involved in the detention and treatment of detainees. The BBC is reporting about a suit planned by Mohammed Jawad:
Mohammed Jawad was released and arrived in his native Afghanistan earlier this week. His family says he was 12 at the time of his detention in 2002.
He was in custody …
August 28, 2009 # 9:18 pm # Human Rights, Intelligence, International Law # No Comment
In case you missed this, from the Washington Post:
Latest Documents Released by DOJ
OLC Letter to John Rizzo (PDF) (July 13, 2002)
OLC Memo for Michael Chertoff on Patriot Act (PDF) (Aug. 6, 2002)
OLC Memo on Use of Military Force in Iraq (PDF) (Oct. 21, 2002)
OLC Memo to Inspector General on FBI Bulletins (PDF) (April 5, 2004)
OLC Letter to Scott Muller …
August 24, 2009 # 9:26 pm # Armed Conflict, Foreign Policy, Human Rights, Intelligence, International Law # No Comment
The long-awaited CIA Inspector General’s 2004 report on detention and interrogation was released today. The report can be found in pdf form here. I am still trying to make my way through the report. In the meantime, Mark Mazzetti and Scott Shane in the New York Times observe:
Although large portions of the 109-page report are blacked out, it gives new …
August 24, 2009 # 7:25 pm # Armed Conflict, Foreign Policy, Human Rights, Intelligence, International Law # No Comment
A previous post reported on the recommendations by the Special Task Force. The press release issued by the Justice Department follows. (HT: Bobby Chesney)
Special Task Force on Interrogations and Transfer Policies Issues Its Recommendations to the President
Attorney General Eric Holder today announced that the Special Task Force on Interrogations and Transfer Policies, which was created pursuant to Executive Order …