- Info
Volume 52, Number 4
Unclassified extracts from Studies in Intelligence Volume 52, Number 4
(December 2008)
Intelligence
Today and Tomorrow
Teaching Intelligence
Analysts in the UK
What Analysts Need to
Understand: The King’s Intelligence Studies Program - [PDF 476.17KB*]
Michael S. Goodman and Sir
David Omand
Historical
Perspective
Guardian Spies
The US Coast Guard and OSS Maritime Operations During World War II - [PDF 1.46MB*]
LCDR Michael Bennett, USCG
Intelligence
in Recent Public Literature
Nisei Linguists:
Japanese Americans in the Military Intelligence Service During World War II -
[PDF 45.44KB*]
Reviewed by Stephen C.
Mercado
An Ordinary Spy -
[PDF 43.54KB*]
Reviewed by John Ehrman
The Intelligence Officer’s
Bookshelf -
[PDF 99.70KB*]
Compiled and Reviewed by
Hayden B. Peake
* Adobe® Reader® is needed to view Adobe PDF files. If you don't already have Adobe Reader installed, you may download the current version at www.adobe.com (opens in a new window). [external link disclaimer]
Contributors
LCDR Michael
Bennett, USCG, is Director of
Strategic Intelligence Studies at the US Coast Guard Academy. He has done
extensive research into the origins and evolution of intelligence in Coast
Guard.
John Ehrman serves in the Directorate of Intelligence in CIA
and is currently assigned to the Counterintelligence
Center. He is a frequent
contributor and a winner of a Studies annual award.
Dr. Michael Goodman is a senior lecturer in the Department of War
Studies, King’s College London, where he teaches an MA program “Intelligence
and International Security.” He is the author of Spying on the Nuclear Bear:
Anglo-American Intelligence and the Soviet Bomb. He is seconded to the
Cabinet Office as the official historian of the Joint Intelligence Committee.
Sir David Omand,
GCB, is a visiting professor
at the Department of War Studies, King’s College London. He has been his
government’s Security and Intelligence Coordinator, director of GCHQ, and
permanent secretary of the Home Office and policy director of the Ministry of Defense. He had seven years of service on the Joint Intelligence Committee.
Stephen C. Mercado is an analyst in the DNI
Open Source
Center, specializing on East Asia. He is a frequent contributor and winner of two annual Studies awards. He is the author
of The Shadow Warriors of Nakano: A History
of the Imperial Army’s Elite
Intelligence School.
Hayden Peake is the curator of the CIA Historical Intelligence
Collection. He served in the Directorate of Science and Technology and the
Directorate of Operations.
All statements of fact, opinion, or analysis expressed in this article are those of the author. Nothing in the article should be construed as asserting or implying US government endorsement of an article’s factual statements and interpretations.
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Posted: Jan 09, 2009 07:05 AM
Last Updated: Jan 09, 2009 07:06 AM
Last Reviewed: Jan 09, 2009 07:05 AM