Description
There is a consensus that intelligence reform is imperative, but little agreement on how to translate the imperative into action. This thoughtful volume brings the expertise and ingenuity of a pack of informed observers to bear, producing thorough and balanced recommendations that advance well beyond the loose talk, glittering generalities, and political heat that have dominated public discussion. -- Richard K. Betts, director, Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia University A country obtains quality intelligence only if it has sound intelligence policies. In this fine volume, a smart and seasoned group of observers, all with direct intelligence operations experience, lays out the policies the United States must adopt in order to get the quality intelligence it so clearly needs. -- Robert J. Art, Christian A. Herter Professor of International Relations, Brandeis University In this new security environment challenges are likely to arise out of confused and chaotic local settings, and involve nimble enemies that can lose themselves in civil society. In struggling to cope with these challenges, the U. S. intelligence community can appear lumbering and muscle-bound. To help the community raise its game, Jennifer Sims and Burton Gerber have brought together an expert group with inside knowledge and some imaginative proposals. -- Lawrence Freedman, professor of war studies, King's College, London America is in the midst of a national debate on intelligence reform. Unfortunately, some of the loudest arguments come from amateurs. Sims and Gerber have assembled the thoughts of genuine experts. This book merits a prominent role in an essential debate. -- John J. Hamre, president and CEO, Center for Strategic and International Studies
About the Author
Jennifer E. Sims is a visiting professor with the security studies program at Georgetown University. She has served on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and in the Department of State as a senior intelligence officer. She has published a number of works on intelligence and arms control, including Icarus Restrained: An Intellectual History of Nuclear Arms Control, 1945-1960. Burton Gerber served for 39 years, most of it overseas, as an operations officer in the Central Intelligence Agency. He frequently lectures on ethics as related to public policy and intelligence.
Reviews
It would be extremely difficult to find a better team of contributors for a book of this nature. Parameters
Book Information
ISBN 9781589010697
Author Jennifer E. Sims
Format Paperback
Page Count 304
Imprint Georgetown University Press
Publisher Georgetown University Press
Weight(grams) 544g