Author: Julian Ku

The ACLU will be suing the C.I.A. (at least according to this BBC Report) alleging C.I.A. officials broke U.S. and international law "when they authorised agents to abduct an innocent man, detain him in incommunicado, beat him, drug and transport him to a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan. . ." The BBC refers to a press release, but I can't...

SCOTUSBlog notes that the Fourth Circuit has, unusually, denied the government's unopposed motion to transfer former enemy combatant Jose Padilla to civilian custody. Instead, it has ordered the government to brief the question of whether the Fourth Circuit should vacate its current judgment upholding Padilla's detention as an enemy combatant in light of the new facts revealed by the government...

Less than a week after the U.S. surrendered to a NAFTA tribunal's order to eliminate U.S. duties on Canadian lumber, Canada brazenly announced yesterday that it would add a $1.28 billion subsidy to existing supports for the Canadian lumber industry. In other words, just as the U.S. dropped its duties in a good faith gesture, Canada has decided to whack...

After months of whining by high-level Canadian politicians, the U.S. Commerce Department announced yesterday that the U.S. will comply with a NAFTA tribunal's decision requiring the reduction or elimination of U.S. duties on Canadian lumber. The U.S. refusal to eliminate these duties had been one of the main sources of friction between the U.S. and Canada and potentially threatened the...

An Australian national convicted by Singapore of drug running is facing execution next week, causing much justifiable angst in Australia. Some are advising the Australian government to seek a provisional measures order from the ICJ to stop the execution. As Australia's Prime Minister announced today, however, such an appeal to the ICJ would be "pointless" because Singapore hasn't done anything...

The Washington Post is reporting that Jose Padilla, the alleged dirty bomber held for three years as an "enemy combatant", has been indicted by a federal grand jury for conspiring to commit terrorist attacks overseas. Interestingly, the indictment does not include the "dirty bomb" charges that were the basis for Padilla's detention as an enemy combatant. The obvious reason...

Creighton University School of Law has recently been awarded a $750,000 U.S. government grant to create a "a working model to establish a bilateral U.S.-Cuba property claims tribunal." The goal is to have this model in place, along with others, for eventual use to ease Cuba's post-Castro transition to democracy.The grant to Creighton has already been the subject of some...

This hilarious video of two Chinese students lip-syncing the Backstreet Boys reminds me for the zillionth time how technology and globalization is changing China in ways we can't even imagine. President Bush, currently in Beijing, might want to take notice. Of course, the real value of this video is not its social-political significance. It's just downright hilarious and...

Thanks to Roger for pointing out this interesting poll. Here's another tidbit. The U.N.'s favorability rating among the general public continues to fall rather dramatically and pretty widely among all demographic groups, even as public support for the war in Iraq continues toi fall. Here is an excerpt from the report's section on the U.N.The public's view of the United...

As Bobby helpfully notes in a comment to my last post, the revised Graham Amendment has made it through the full Senate and will be presented to the House negotiators soon for approval on that side (see the Washington Post's report here). It is a bit early, but it is worth thinking about the legal effect of the amendment, if...

Here is the full text of the proposed Senate compromise bill on detainee rights to challenge their confinement in federal courts, which I discussed below (thanks to Greg Fox for the link). I may have slightly different comments after reviewing the bill directly, but I must run to class...