ABSTRACT

This topical volume offers a comprehensive review of secret intelligence organizations and activities.

Intelligence has been in the news consistently since 9/11 and the Iraqi WMD errors. Leading experts in the field approach the three major missions of intelligence: collection-and-analysis; covert action; and counterintelligence. Within each of these missions, the dynamically written essays dissect the so-called intelligence cycle to reveal the challenges of gathering and assessing information from around the world. Covert action, the most controversial intelligence activity, is explored, with special attention on the issue of military organizations moving into what was once primarily a civilian responsibility. The authors furthermore examine the problems that are associated with counterintelligence, protecting secrets from foreign spies and terrorist organizations, as well as the question of intelligence accountability, and how a nation can protect its citizens against the possible abuse of power by its own secret agencies.

The Handbook of Intelligence Studies is a benchmark publication with major importance both for current research and for the future of the field. It is essential reading for advanced undergraduates, graduate students and scholars of intelligence studies, international security, strategic studies and political science in general.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part 1|49 pages

The study of intelligence

chapter 4|12 pages

Intelligence ethics

Laying a foundation for the second oldest profession

part 2|38 pages

The evolution of modern intelligence

chapter 6|9 pages

"Knowing the self, knowing the other"

The comparative analysis of security intelligence

part 3|68 pages

The intelligence cycle and the search for information

part 4|56 pages

The intelligence cycle and the crafting of intelligence reports

chapter 13|16 pages

Strategic warning

Intelligence support in a world of uncertainty and surprise

part 5|72 pages

Counterintelligence and covert action

chapter 17|8 pages

Cold War intelligence defectors

chapter 19|16 pages

Émigré intelligence reporting

Sifting fact from fiction

chapter 20|10 pages

Linus Pauling

A case study in counterintelligence run amok

chapter 21|10 pages

The role of covert action

chapter 22|10 pages

The future of covert action

part 6|62 pages

Intelligence accountability

chapter 23|14 pages

Intelligence oversight in the UK

The case of Iraq

chapter 24|14 pages

Intelligence accountability

Challenges for parliaments and intelligence services