Strategic intelligence: windows into a secret world : an anthology
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Los Angeles, CA
Roxbury Pub.
2004
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XIV, 473 S. |
ISBN: | 1931719276 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
About This Book
..................................iv
About the Editors
.................................xi
About the Contributors
...............................xii
Preface and Acknowledgments
...........................xiv
PART I. INTELLIGENCE IN THE UNITED STATES: AN INTRODUCTION
Introduction
.................................1
1.
The Evolution of the U.S. Intelligence Community
—
An Historical Overview
.....5
Aspin-Brown Commission
Written by Commission staff member Phyllis Provost McNeil, this history of the U.S. in¬
telligence community traces how todays intelligence institutions, while shaped by the
Cold War, are based on an American tradition of supporting foreign and defense policy
with clandestinely acquired information.
2.
The Quaintness of the U.S. Intelligence Community: Its Origin, Theory,
and Problems
...............................21
Thomas
F
Troy
This overview of the evolution of the U.S. intelligence community, offers some in¬
sights into why it is so difficult to get various intelligence agencies to set aside their own
agendas and work toward improving the overall intelligence picture available to policy¬
makers.
3.
The Use and Limits of U.S. Intelligence
....................33
Frank J. Cilluffo, Ronald A. Marks, and George C. Salmoiraghi
This discussion of the new terrorism explains why the intelligence community was
not well prepared to meet the new threat, exemplified by the September
11
terrorist at¬
tacks.
PART II. INTELLIGENCE COLLECTION
Introduction
.................................41
4.
CIA and Its Discontents
..........................48
Patrick R. Riley
A former Directorate of Operations case officer explores whether the CIA can cope with
all the intelligence requirements placed on it since the end of the Cold War and calls for
a more discriminating list of targets for intelligence collection.
5.
Re-examining Problems and Prospects in U.S. Imagery Intelligence
........56
John M. Diamond
A perennial problem of intelligence collection is how to acquire useful knowledge from
the glut of information gathered by spy machines and human agents. This article fo-
cuses
on how to cope with the flood of photographs (or images) that pour back to the
United States from surveillance satellites.
6.
The Satellite Gap
.............................68
Jeffrey T. Richelson
A researcher in the National Security Archives in Washington, D.C., Richelson warns of
an impending gap in U.S. surveillance satellite coverage, as one generation of birds
begins to wear out and fall to earth without another generation ready to replace them in
space.
7.
The Time of Troubles: The U.S. National Security Agency in the
Twenty-First Century
............................73
Matthew M. Aid
America
s
largest intelligence organization, the National Security Agency, is beset with a
variety of bureaucratic problems according to this expert on signals intelligence, who
recommends improvements in management and outreach, as well as technological
remedies.
PART III. INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS
Introduction
.................................91
8.
Analysis, War, and Decision: Why Intelligence Failures Are Inevitable
.......97
Richard
K. Betts
This history of diplomatic and military affairs is riddled with instances when intelli¬
gence analysts failed to provide timely warning of what was about to unfold.
Betts
pres¬
ents a strong explanation of why intelligence failures are envitable, as well as insights
into the myriad challenges that analysts must overcome to offer useful estimates of fu¬
ture events.
9.
The Importance of Open Source Intelligence to the Military
...........112
Robert D. Steele
Steele describes various types of information available on the World Wide Web and ex¬
plains how these sources can be exploited by intelligence organizations to supplement
the classified information they traditionally rely upon as a basis for their estimates.
10.
A Policymaker s Perspective on Intelligence Analysis
..............120
Robert D.
Blackwill
and Jack Davis
Policymakers must focus on the pressing issues of the day, leaving little time to peruse
finished intelligence products.
Blackwill
offers the reader a glimpse into the lives of pol¬
icymakers and analysts as they interact.
11.
Intelligence Estimates and the Decision-Maker
................127
Shlomo Gazit
Gazit highlights the importance of establishing what he describes as a reciprocal rela¬
tionship between analysts and policymakers and ways to bridge the gap that exists be¬
tween them.
12.
CIA s Strategic Intelligence in Iraq
.....................143
Richard L. Russell
This report on the CIA s performance prior to the first Gulf War gives analysts high
marks for accurate estimates of Iraqi intentions and capabilities and the performance
of U.S. forces in battle.
vi
13.
Early Warning Versus Concept: The Case of the Yom Kippur War
1973......153
Ephraim
Kahana
This study of Israeli intelligence performance prior to the
1973
Yom Kippur War de¬
scribes how the analytic framework that dominated Israeli perceptions of events in the
fall of
1973
led both analysts and officials to misinterpret information about the threats
they faced.
PART IV. THE DANGER OF INTELLIGENCE POLITICIZATION
Introduction
................................167
14.
The Politicization of Intelligence
......................171
Harry Howe Ransom
This overview of how politicization occurs within the intelligence community suggests
that it is inherent in the production of intelligence, because information is crucial to
gaining and preserving political power.
15.
Intelligence to Please? The Order of Battle Controversy During the Vietnam War
. . 183
James J. Wirtz
In this account of a dispute that occurred within the U.S. intelligence community on the
eve of the
1968
Tet
offensive, Wirtz explores charges made by Samuel Adams, a CIA ana¬
lyst, that a conspiracy existed to prevent accurate information about enemy troop
strength from reaching senior members of the Johnson administration.
16.
Inside Ivory Bunkers: CIA Analysts Resist Managers Pandering
.........198
H. Bradford Westerfield
Westerfield describes the controversy surrounding the
1991
nomination of Robert
Gates as Director of Central Intelligence, who was disliked by many analysts because
they believed that he pressured them to produce finished intelligence that supported
White House policy preferences.
PART V. INTELLIGENCE AND THE POLICYMAKER
Introduction
................................219
17.
Intelligence and National Action
......................224
Michael Herman
In this introduction to the role played by intelligence in shaping diplomacy and military
action, Herman suggests that many things can influence the making of policy in peace¬
time and war, not just information.
18.
Tribal Tongues: Intelligence Consumers, Intelligence Producers
.........234
Mark M. Lowenthal
Lowenthal suggests that the different bureaucratic cultures of the policymaking and in¬
telligence communities often form a significant barrier to a close relationship between
the consumers and producers of intelligence.
19.
Building Leverage in the Long War: Ensuring Intelligence Community Creativity
in the Fight Against Terrorism
.......................242
James W, Harris
In this call for intelligence reform in the wake of the September
11
tragedy, Harris high¬
lights the role elected officials can play in shaping the intelligence community to meet
the terrorist threat.
PART VI: COVERT ACTION
Introduction
................................253
20.
Interfering With Civil Society: CIA and KGB Covert Political Action
During the Cold War
...........................260
Kevin A. O Brien
The Cold War was in large part a subterranean battle between the intelligence services
of the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, as carried out by their
premier intelligence services: the CIA and the KGB. O Brien examines the political di¬
mension of covert actions undertaken by these two intelligence behemoths.
21.
Covert Action: Swampland of American Foreign Policy
.............274
Senator Frank Church
The chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee that investigated intelligence
abuses in
1975-76
finds in the excesses of the CIA abroad the symptoms of an illusion of
American omnipotence that entrapped and enthralled the nation s presidents through¬
out the Cold War.
22.
Covert Action Can Be Just
.........................278
James A. Barry
Exploring the use of covert action from the point of view of just-war theory, Barry estab¬
lishes benchmarks for judging the morality of this controversial form of secret foreign
policy. He eschews highly invasive operations but advances an ethical justification for
certain forms of covert action.
PART
VII. COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
Introduction
................................287
23.
Cold War Spies: Why They Spied and How They Got Caught
...........294
Stan A. Taylor and Daniel Snow
Why do some people commit treason against their own country? Taylor and Snow ex¬
amine this question and find that the answer is simple enough: for money.
24.
Bane of Counterintelligence: Our Penchant for Self-Deception
..........304
Tennent H. Bagley
Former CIA officer Bagley claims to have found the counterintelligence enemy and the
enemy is us: or at least the penchant of intelligence bureaucracies to avoid the reality
that they may have been penetrated by a hostile intelligence service.
25.
OSS and the Venona Decrypts
.......................315
Hayden
В. Реаке
Examining the Soviet Venona cables intercepted by U.S. Army intelligence during the
Cold War, former CIA officer Peake finds evidence of KGB and
GRU
infiltration of the
Office of Strategic Services, the forerunner of the CIA.
26.
Counterintelligence: The Broken Triad
....................327
Frederick L.
Wettering
An expert on counterintelligence formerly with the
CIA, Wettering
sees U.S. counterin¬
telligence as a discipline in disarray and in need of radical reform.
PART
VIII.
ACCOUNTABILITY AND CIVIL LIBERTIES
Introduction
................................345
27.
Intelligence: Welcome to the American Government
..............351
Gregory F. Treverton
Treverton explores the merits of viewing intelligence organizations as a regular part of
America s government, as subject to constitutional safeguards as any other department
or agency.
•viii
28.
Covert
Action
and Accountability: Decision-Making for America s Secret
Foreign Policy
..............................370
Loch K. Johnson
Johnson examines the specifics of congressional oversight and its implications for co¬
vert action.
29.
Unleashing the Rogue Elephant: September
11
and Letting the CIA Be the CIA
. . . 390
Frederick P. Hitz
In hopes of maintaining accountability without stifling the effectiveness of intelligence
officers, intelligence reformers and anti-reformers have debated the proper level of su¬
pervision of the CIA. Hitz argues that the leash on the CIA is too tight and suggests how
to improve effectiveness without eroding civil liberties.
30.
Ethics and Intelligence
..........................397
E. Drexel Godfrey, Jr.
Godfrey maintains that even in the dark domain of intelligence one must have certain
limits of restraint
—
at least in nations like the United States that have long displayed a
concern for morality in the making of foreign policy.
31.
Another System of Oversight: Intelligence and the Rise of Judicial Intervention.
. . 407
Frederic F.
Manget
The judicial branch of government is a latecomer to the world of intelligence, but, as
Manget
notes, it is now very much a part of that world as the courts provide yet another
check on intelligence abuse.
32.
Congressional Supervision of America s Secret Agencies: The Experience and
Legacy of the Church Committee
......................414
Loch K. Johnson
A former assistant to Senator Frank Church, who led the Senate inquiry into alleged
CIA abuses of power in
1975,
Johnson reviews the experiences of that investigation and
gauges the contribution made by the Church Committee.
PART IX. INTELLIGENCE IN OTHER LANDS
Introduction
....................;...........427
33.
The Heritage and Future of the Russian Intelligence Community
.........432
Robert W. Pringle
In this postmortem of the KGB, Pringle describes how it kept Soviet citizens in line and
protected the regime from both internal and external political threats. He also describes
the difficult task facing the Russian government as it creates new intelligence organiza¬
tions from the remnants of the KGB.
34.
The Fall and Rise of France s Spymasters
...................438
Percy Kemp
Following the upheaval that accompanied the collapse of the Soviet Union and the first
Gulf War, Hemp explains how the French government realized that it needed a compe¬
tent intelligence community to cope with emerging challenges.
35.
Controlling Intelligence in New Democracies
.................444
Thomas
C. Bruneau
Bruneau describes an issue that is often overlooked in the literature on transitions to
democracy: the reform of intelligence organizations and their role in fledgling democ¬
racies.
36.
Intelligence
and Policy
.......................... 454
Percy Cradock
Cradock, a former senior British intelligence officer, assesses the performance of Brit¬
ish intelligence since World War II.
U.S. Intelligence Leadership,
1947-2004....................... 461
The Organization of the U.S. Intelligence Community
................. 463
Select Bibliography
................................ 465
Name Index
................................... 467
Subject Index
.................................. 471
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publisher | Roxbury Pub. |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology ed. with introductions by Loch K. Johnson ... Los Angeles, CA Roxbury Pub. 2004 XIV, 473 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index USA Central Intelligence Agency (DE-588)1021698-4 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Military intelligence Military intelligence United States Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 gnd rswk-swf Spionage (DE-588)4056287-6 gnd rswk-swf Geheimdienst (DE-588)4019737-2 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Geheimdienst (DE-588)4019737-2 s Spionage (DE-588)4056287-6 s Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 s Geschichte z DE-604 USA Central Intelligence Agency (DE-588)1021698-4 b Johnson, Loch K. 1942- Sonstige (DE-588)132480220 oth Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012823818&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology USA Central Intelligence Agency (DE-588)1021698-4 gnd Military intelligence Military intelligence United States Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 gnd Spionage (DE-588)4056287-6 gnd Geheimdienst (DE-588)4019737-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)1021698-4 (DE-588)4003846-4 (DE-588)4056287-6 (DE-588)4019737-2 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology |
title_auth | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology |
title_exact_search | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology |
title_full | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology ed. with introductions by Loch K. Johnson ... |
title_fullStr | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology ed. with introductions by Loch K. Johnson ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Strategic intelligence windows into a secret world : an anthology ed. with introductions by Loch K. Johnson ... |
title_short | Strategic intelligence |
title_sort | strategic intelligence windows into a secret world an anthology |
title_sub | windows into a secret world : an anthology |
topic | USA Central Intelligence Agency (DE-588)1021698-4 gnd Military intelligence Military intelligence United States Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 gnd Spionage (DE-588)4056287-6 gnd Geheimdienst (DE-588)4019737-2 gnd |
topic_facet | USA Central Intelligence Agency Military intelligence Military intelligence United States Außenpolitik Spionage Geheimdienst USA Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012823818&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT johnsonlochk strategicintelligencewindowsintoasecretworldananthology |