Description

Book Synopsis
Intelligence agencies spend huge sums of money to collect and analyze vast quantities of national security data for their political leaders. How well is this intelligence analyzed, how often is it acted on by policymakers, and does it have a positive or negative effect on decision making? Drawing on declassified documents, interviews with intelligence veterans and policymakers, and other sources, The Image of the Enemy breaks new ground as it examines how seven countries analyzed and used intelligence to shape their understanding of their main adversary. The cases in the book include the Soviet Union's analysis of the United States (and vice versa), East Germany's analysis of West Germany (and vice versa), British intelligence in the early years of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, Israeli intelligence about the Palestinians, Pakistani intelligence on India, and US intelligence about Islamist terrorists. These rivalries provide rich case studies for scholars and offer today's analysts and policymakers the opportunity to closely evaluate past successes and failures in intelligence analysis and the best ways to give information support to policymakers. Using these lessons from the past, they can move forward to improve analysis of current adversaries and future threats.

Trade Review
The interplay among the case studies is fascinating and instructive for academics and intelligence professionals alike. Studies in Intelligence A valuable addition to the historiography of modern intelligence. It is both a work of clear historical analysis as well as a catalogue of strengths and weaknesses, the understanding of which would be of great benefit to members of the intelligence community across the world today. By focusing on intelligence assessments of one's primary adversary, it highlights a factor which is often forgotten in the study of intelligence-the human role in evaluating raw intelligence material, understanding how it fits into the bigger picture, and then acting on it accordingly. Institute of Historical Research

Table of Contents
Introduction: Achieving Objective, Policy-Relevant IntelligencePaul Maddrell 1. Soviet Leaders, Soviet Intelligence, and Changing Views of the United States, 1965-1991Raymond L. Garthoff 2. The Stasi's Reporting on the Federal Republic of GermanyPaul Maddrell 3. "We May Not Always Be Right, but We're Never Wrong": US Intelligence Assessments of the Soviet Union, 1972-1991 Benjamin B. Fischer 4. East Germany in the Sights of the West German Federal Intelligence Service: Four Examples from As Many DecadesMatthias Uhl 5. British Intelligence, PIRA, and the Early Years of the Northern Ireland Crisis: Remembering, Forgetting, and MythologizingEunan O'Halpin6. Israeli Intelligence Threat Perceptions of Palestinian Terrorist Organizations, 1948-2008Tamir Libel and Shlomo Shpiro 7. Pakistani Intelligence and India Julian Richards 8. American Intelligence Assessments of the Jihadists, 1989-2011Mark Stout Conclusion: Intelligence and PolicyPaul Maddrell List of ContributorsIndex

The Image of the Enemy: Intelligence Analysis of

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    A Hardback by Paul Maddrell, Paul Maddrell, Raymond L. Garthoff

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      View other formats and editions of The Image of the Enemy: Intelligence Analysis of by Paul Maddrell

      Publisher: Georgetown University Press
      Publication Date: 01/11/2015
      ISBN13: 9781626162389, 978-1626162389
      ISBN10: 1626162387

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Intelligence agencies spend huge sums of money to collect and analyze vast quantities of national security data for their political leaders. How well is this intelligence analyzed, how often is it acted on by policymakers, and does it have a positive or negative effect on decision making? Drawing on declassified documents, interviews with intelligence veterans and policymakers, and other sources, The Image of the Enemy breaks new ground as it examines how seven countries analyzed and used intelligence to shape their understanding of their main adversary. The cases in the book include the Soviet Union's analysis of the United States (and vice versa), East Germany's analysis of West Germany (and vice versa), British intelligence in the early years of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, Israeli intelligence about the Palestinians, Pakistani intelligence on India, and US intelligence about Islamist terrorists. These rivalries provide rich case studies for scholars and offer today's analysts and policymakers the opportunity to closely evaluate past successes and failures in intelligence analysis and the best ways to give information support to policymakers. Using these lessons from the past, they can move forward to improve analysis of current adversaries and future threats.

      Trade Review
      The interplay among the case studies is fascinating and instructive for academics and intelligence professionals alike. Studies in Intelligence A valuable addition to the historiography of modern intelligence. It is both a work of clear historical analysis as well as a catalogue of strengths and weaknesses, the understanding of which would be of great benefit to members of the intelligence community across the world today. By focusing on intelligence assessments of one's primary adversary, it highlights a factor which is often forgotten in the study of intelligence-the human role in evaluating raw intelligence material, understanding how it fits into the bigger picture, and then acting on it accordingly. Institute of Historical Research

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Achieving Objective, Policy-Relevant IntelligencePaul Maddrell 1. Soviet Leaders, Soviet Intelligence, and Changing Views of the United States, 1965-1991Raymond L. Garthoff 2. The Stasi's Reporting on the Federal Republic of GermanyPaul Maddrell 3. "We May Not Always Be Right, but We're Never Wrong": US Intelligence Assessments of the Soviet Union, 1972-1991 Benjamin B. Fischer 4. East Germany in the Sights of the West German Federal Intelligence Service: Four Examples from As Many DecadesMatthias Uhl 5. British Intelligence, PIRA, and the Early Years of the Northern Ireland Crisis: Remembering, Forgetting, and MythologizingEunan O'Halpin6. Israeli Intelligence Threat Perceptions of Palestinian Terrorist Organizations, 1948-2008Tamir Libel and Shlomo Shpiro 7. Pakistani Intelligence and India Julian Richards 8. American Intelligence Assessments of the Jihadists, 1989-2011Mark Stout Conclusion: Intelligence and PolicyPaul Maddrell List of ContributorsIndex

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