ABSTRACT

This volume examines the ethical issues generated by recent developments in intelligence collection and offers a comprehensive analysis of the key legal, moral and social questions thereby raised.

Intelligence officers, whether gatherers, analysts or some combination thereof, are operating in a sea of social, political, scientific and technological change. This book examines the new challenges faced by the intelligence community as a result of these changes. It looks not only at how governments employ spies as a tool of state and how the ultimate outcomes are judged by their societies, but also at the mind-set of the spy. In so doing, this volume casts a rare light on an often ignored dimension of spying: the essential role of truth and how it is defined in an intelligence context. This book offers some insights into the workings of the intelligence community and aims to provide the first comprehensive and unifying analysis of the relevant moral, legal and social questions, with a view toward developing policy that may influence real-world decision making. The contributors analyse the ethics of spying across a broad canvas – historical, philosophical, moral and cultural – with chapters covering interrogation and torture, intelligence’s relation to war, remote killing, cyber surveillance, responsibility and governance. In the wake of the phenomena of WikiLeaks and the Edward Snowden revelations, the intelligence community has entered an unprecedented period of broad public scrutiny and scepticism, making this volume a timely contribution.

This book will be of much interest to students of ethics, intelligence studies, security studies, foreign policy and IR in general.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part |40 pages

The moral case for spying

chapter |12 pages

The virtues of Bond and vices of Bauer

An Aristotelian defence of espionage

chapter |12 pages

The limits of intelligence gathering

Gianni Vattimo and the need to monitor ‘violent' thinkers

part |40 pages

Interrogation, torture and terrorism

part |50 pages

Spying as war: classificatory problems

chapter |12 pages

Persons, personhood and proportionality

Building on a just war approach to intelligence ethics

part |48 pages

Remote surveillance and killing

chapter |13 pages

I, spy robot

The ethics of robots in national intelligence activities

chapter |14 pages

Targeting thresholds

The impact of intelligence capability on ethical requirements for high-value targeting operations

part |25 pages

Leaks and secrets

chapter |11 pages

WikiLeaks and whistleblowing

Privacy and consent in an age of digital surveillance

part |39 pages

Responsibility and governance