After Congress allowed Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to expire over the weekend, Strauss Center Director Adam Klein provided his perspective to The Christian Science Monitor in their article “Congress lets part of spy law lapse. What’s next for counterterrorism efforts?” FISA Section 702 grants the U.S. government the ability to surveil non-U.S. persons abroad without a warrant during the course of national security investigations, which Klein noted “has unlocked unbelievable intelligence value for the U.S. government at very, very low cost.”
With the expiration of this provision over the weekend, Klein emphasized the potential negative impacts on U.S. national security. “[The expiration of FISA Section 702] will be an untested experiment,” Klein said. “I think it’s quite unfortunate that we’ve decided to run this experiment at a time when we have numerous very serious threats.”
Strauss Center Director Adam Klein was interviewed for The Christian Science Monitor on "Why the surveillance powers in FISA roil Congress – across party lines," which discusses the national security and privacy issues surrounding Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which is set to expire at the end of April. “Imagine that, today, an FBI agent is...
The Strauss Center for International Security and Law congratulates Strauss Center Senior Fellow Brock Dahl on his nomination to be Legal Adviser of the Department of State. Brock is one of the nation's foremost national security lawyers.
Strauss Center National Security Law Fellow Megan Ezekannagha published an article with Lieber Institute at West Point's Articles of War on "Fighting at Machine Speed: AI and U.S. Army Counterfire Under the Law of War." Part I is available here and Part II is available here. "Integrating AI into counterfire offers the Army a credible way to compress the sensor-to-shooter...