ABSTRACT

This is a new evaluation of the role, dynamics and challenges of intelligence in peacekeeping activities and its place in a much wider social, economic and political context.

It assesses the role of coalition forces, law enforcement agencies, development institutions, and non-governmental organisations who have become partners in peace support activities.

Peacekeeping Intelligence (PKI) is a new form of intelligence stressing predominantly open sources of information used to create Open Source Intelligence (OSINT), and that demands multi-lateral sharing of intelligence at all levels. Unlike national intelligence, which emphasizes spies, satellites, and secrecy, PKI brings together many aspects of intelligence gathering including the media and NGOs. It seeks to establish standards in open source collection, analysis, security, counterintelligence and training and produces unclassified intelligence useful to the public. The challenges facing peacekeeping intelligence are increasingly entwined with questions of arms control, commercial interests, international crime, and ethnic conflict.

This book will be of great interest to all students and scholars of military and security studies, intelligence and peacekeeping.

chapter chapter 1|14 pages

Peacekeeping Intelligence

Extending partnerships and boundaries for peacekeeping

part 1|50 pages

Peacekeeping and its Intelligence Requirements

chapter chapter 2|15 pages

Beyond the Next Hill

The future of military intelligence in peace support operations

chapter chapter 3|9 pages

A Reading of Tea Leaves

Toward a framework for modern peacekeeping intelligence

chapter chapter 4|17 pages

Sigint and Peacekeeping

The untapped intelligence resource

chapter chapter 5|7 pages

C4ISR

The unified theory of support to military operations

part 2|52 pages

Evolution of Intelligence in Multinational Peacekeeping Missions

chapter chapter 6|20 pages

Intelligence at United Nations Headquarters?

The Information and Research Unit and the intervention in Eastern Zaire (1996)

chapter chapter 8|12 pages

Peacekeeping Intelligence and Civil Society

Is civil–military cooperation the missing link?

part 3|93 pages

New Elements of Intelligence Analysis

chapter |10 pages

Peacekeeping Intelligence for the Stakeholders

An underutilized open resource

chapter chapter 11|18 pages

Just Peacekeeping

Managing the relationship between peacekeeping intelligence and the prevention and punishment of international crimes

chapter chapter 13|12 pages

Enabling Intelligence in Peacekeeping

Laying the groundwork for effective education and training

chapter chapter 14|22 pages

A Bridge Too Far?

The theory and practice of the effects-based concept and the multinational inter-agency role