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The clock is running out on President Barack Obama's military adventure in Libya. Today his campaign of pinprick air strikes and half-hearted support for the rebels will run smack into the War Powers Resolution.
While Obama might claim success early on, given the vague mission of protecting civilians, we should not be fooled into thinking that an ongoing civil war represents a victory for American arms.
For two years, President Barack Obama has pretended that terrorism is a crime, that prisoners are unwanted, and that Gitmo is unneeded.
Immanuel Kant and Jürgen Habermas are still important and relevant to political thought in international relations.
This working paper makes five observations regarding the Supreme Court's practice of relying upon foreign and international decisions for support of its constitutional rulings.
What accounts fo the relationship between presidential authority and the laws governing international affairs?
Over the next several years, the United States must decide whether its interests are better served by trying to preserve threatened nation-states or by dismantling them.
To pretend that the Geneva Convention applies to al Qaeda, a non-state actor that targets civilians and disregards other laws of war, denies the reality of the war on terror.




