Intelligence and Strategic Culture

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Active WMD Programme
American Intelligence Analysts
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Category=JMR
Category=JP
Category=JWA
Category=JWKF
Category=NHW
Chinese POWs
CIA History Staff
CIA's Intelligence Analyst
CIA’s Intelligence Analyst
Cold War espionage
Colonial Administration
counterinsurgency operations
cultural awareness in intelligence gathering
Declassified Documents
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eq_society-politics
ideological influence
intelligence
intelligence analysis
intelligence and politics
Intelligence Community
Intelligence Cycle
intelligence failure analysis
Iraq's WMD Capability
Iraqi WMD
Iraq’s WMD Capability
JIC's Assessment
JIC’s Assessment
Major UK
Malayan Emergency
Malayan Police
Matthew Aid
NSA Historian
Police Intelligence Systems
Police Intelligence Work
political culture
Saddam's WMD Programme
Saddam’s WMD Programme
security studies
strategic culture
Top Secret
UK Intelligence
UK Intelligence Community
WMD Programme

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415523547
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Reliable information on potential security threats is not just the result of diligent intelligence work but also a product of context and culture. The volume explores the nexus between the intelligence process and strategic culture. How can and does the strategic outlook of the United States and the United Kingdom in particular, influence the intelligence gathering, assessment and dissemination process?

This book contains an assessment of how political agendas and ideological outlook have significant influence on both the content and process of intelligence. It looks in particular at the premise of hearts and minds policies, culture and intelligence gathering in counterinsurgency operations; at case studies from imperial Malaya and Iran in the 1950s and at instances of intelligence failure, e.g. the case of Iraq in 2003. How was intelligence, or the lack thereof, a product of political culture and how did it play a role in the political praxis?

The book shows that political agendas and the ideological outlook have a significant influence upon both the content and process of intelligence.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Intelligence and National Security.

Isabelle Duyvesteyn is a senior lecturer/researcher at the Department of History of International Relations at Utrecht University, The Netherlands. She works in the area of war and peace studies and has published previously on terrorism, insurgency, civil war and strategy.