Espionage and intelligence
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Format: | Book |
Published: |
Detroit
Greenhaven Press
2007
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Series: | Current controversies
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Online Access: | Click Here to View Status and Holdings. |
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Table of Contents:
- 1. Has the U.S. espionage and intelligence-gathering system been successful?
- U.S. intelligence agencies failed to prevent the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks / The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States
- U.S. intelligence on Iraq's possession of weapons of mass destruction was dead wrong / The Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction
- The U.S. intelligence community is bureaucratic, obsolete, and ill-equipped to counter twenty-first-century threats / Richard L. Russell
- U.S. intelligence agencies have had more successes than failures in countering terrorism / Richard K. Betts
- U.S. intelligence on Iraqi WMDs was based on the best information available / George Tenet
- Policy makers misused accurate intelligence to justify the Iraq War / Paul R. Pillar
- 2. Will post-9/11 reforms of the U.S. intelligence system be effective?
- U.S. intelligence reform : an overview / Gary Thomas
- Improved organization of U.S. intelligence agencies will insure good intelligence in the war on terror / George W. Bush
- The 2004 intelligence reform bill in an important first step in improving U.S. intelligence / Gregory F. Treverton, Peter A. Wilson
- The 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act has improved U.S. intelligence / John D. Negroponte
- Post-9/11 reforms of U.S. intelligence will not prevent another terrorist attack / Glenn Hastedt
- The intelligence reforms of 2004 will not fix problems identified in the Iraq intelligence failure / Charles N. Davis
- Numerous problems remain in the U.S. intelligence system despite reforms / Michael A. Gips