ABSTRACT
The vital ingredient in the formulation and execution of a successful foreign policy is intelligence. For the USA, as the Bay of Pigs incident and the Iran-Contra affair have shown, controlling intelligence is a problem which policy-makers and concerned citizens have rarely examined and imperfectly understood. Of the seven contributors, five have direct experience of working with or in intelligence, and all have written extensively on the subject.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |78 pages
Placing the Problem in Context
part |75 pages
Policy Areas
part |34 pages
A Comparative Example