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The Lawfare Podcast

Rational Security: The “Wea Culpa” Edition

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

Military, Intelligence, International Law, Constitutional Law, Rule Of Law, Politics, International Relations, News, Government, History, Diplomacy, Terrorism, National Security, Current Events, Law, Foreign Policy

4.76.2K Ratings

🗓️ 5 November 2025

⏱️ 74 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Scott sat down with co-hosts emeritus Benjamin Wittes and Alan Rozenshtein, and Senior Editor Kate Klonick, to talk through the week’s big national security news stories, including:

  • “Cracks in the Foundation.” The conservative Heritage Foundation—and the broader conservative movement it plays a central role in—has been going through a very public crisis over the past week after its president, Kevin Roberts, came to the defense of right-wing commentator Tucker Carlson after Carlson chose to host white nationalist Nick Fuentes on his podcast. This has led to resignations at the Heritage Foundation, condemnation by certain figures on the right, and a pseudo apology by Roberts. It has also led to a little bit of a reckoning over how some on the right, and to some extent Americans more broadly, have dealt with accusations of anti-Semitism, its relationship to various policy questions, as well as hate speech and other political perspectives. What should we be making of this crisis and what does it tell us about the different policy aspects that intersect with this question of anti-Semitism?
  • “Turning Back the Clock.” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent promised that President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping would “consummate” a TikTok deal at their face-to-face last week. But no details have emerged to date. What should we make of this apparent hold-up—and of the TikTok saga altogether?  
  • “A Foe By Any Other Name.” As the Trump administration has continued its military campaign against narcotics traffickers in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific, U.S. officials have continued to draw parallels between current policies and the Global War on Terrorism, calling detainees “unlawful enemy combatants” and the groups being targeted “designated terrorist organizations.” “If you are a narco-terrorist…,” Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth recently tweeted in relation to one of the strikes, “we will treat you like we treat Al-Qaeda.” But how accurate are these parallels, and why is the Trump administration deploying them in this way?

In object lessons, Ben brings you a little announcement that is shorter than this sentence—you’re just going to have to listen to find out. Alan, hungry for more genre fiction, is diving into The Divine Cities trilogy, starting with “City of Stairs,” by Robert Jackson Bennett. Scott is going out of this world with what he calls “the nerdiest object lesson” he’s ever brought to RatSec: Pioneer, a tabletop role-playing game that has “launched” on Kickstarter. And Kate, not to be outdone in nerdom, displays maybe the mathiest vegetable: the beautiful romanesco.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Kate, you've been with us for months now and somehow we have not gotten you a proper microphone. You're recording off your laptop mic? Yeah. Well, I have a microphone. First of all, it's a very good microphone. It was sent it to me by none other than Hawkeye for taping his podcast. You mean Clint Barrett? No, Alan Alda. Oh, Alan Alda. Oh, that is even better. That is a charismatic man. Yeah, he's he's kind of like.

0:23.0

Also, just ona. Ooh, that is even better. That is a charismatic man.

0:21.3

Yeah, he's kind of like... Also, just on a personal note, there are so few cool guys named Alan in the world and the fact that Alan Alda exists and spells it the right way. Spells it the right way. It's like up there with Alan Alda and Alan Turing. And who's the guy that plays Jack Breacher? That's another. I mean, that's just a jacked Alan.

0:39.5

Alan all just have a zero. Alda and Alan Turing. And who's the guy that plays Jack Breacher? That's another. I mean, that's just a jacked Alan.

1:11.0

Alan, Alda have a Z and an S-H-T in Alda? Yeah, sadly. Sadly, not the, the last name is too much to hope for, but I'll take a first name, Alan. That's a cool thing. But I have this great mic, and, and it's fantastic. And it was like, it's like, you know, it has like a sentimental place in my heart, obviously. And I need to, my computer won't recognize it. So I need to upload a driver. And I feel like it's like 1998, like that I uttered that sentence. I just say as a as a crank, elder millennial, I just want to make the point that this generation

1:12.8

doesn't know how good it has it.

1:14.2

We used to have to download drivers for our keyboards over like a,

1:18.1

and walk both ways.

1:19.4

14K.

1:20.4

Upheld to school.

1:21.6

I mean, certainly wait 25 minutes to download the latest smash mouth

1:24.9

MP3 over Napster.

1:25.9

Or Homestar Runner.

1:27.4

Oh, Homestar Runner.

1:31.1

When Giff animations were all you could get.

1:33.5

Exactly.

1:34.0

Just three moving images.

1:34.9

I teach, you know, so in my internet law class, there's always a moment where I have to be like,

1:39.0

so in the first Facebook, it was static pages.

1:43.5

Well, the Facebook. And people hid that they were like, and people

1:48.8

thought it was like dating and dating online had a huge stigma and I used to go to weddings and I used

1:54.0

to be like sworn to secrecy that they'd met each other on like match.com or like eharmonie.

...

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