National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War
A drastic reform of intelligence activities is long overdue. The Cold War has been over for ten years. No country threatens this nation's existence. Yet we still spend billions of dollars on covert action and espionage.

In National Insecurity ten prominent experts describe, from an insider perspective, what went wrong with U.S. intelligence and what will be necessary to fix it. Drawing on their experience in government administration, research, and the foreign service, they propose a radical rethinking of the United States' intelligence needs in the post-Cold War world. In addition, they offer a coherent and unified plan for reform that can simultaneously protect U. S. security and uphold the values of our democratic system.

As we now know, even during the Cold War, when intelligence was seen as a matter of life and death, our system served us badly. It provided unreliable information, which led to a grossly inflated military budget, as it wreaked havoc around the world, supporting corrupt regimes, promoting the drug trade, and repeatedly violating foreign and domestic laws. Protected by a shroud of secrecy, it paid no price for its mistakes. Instead it grew larger and more insulated every year.

Taking into consideration our strategic interests abroad as well as the price of covert operations in dollars, in reliability, and in good will, every American taxpayer can be informed by and will want to read this book. National Insecurity is essential for readers interested in contemporary political issues, international relations, U.S. history, public policy issues, foreign policy, intelligence reform, and political science.
1141002570
National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War
A drastic reform of intelligence activities is long overdue. The Cold War has been over for ten years. No country threatens this nation's existence. Yet we still spend billions of dollars on covert action and espionage.

In National Insecurity ten prominent experts describe, from an insider perspective, what went wrong with U.S. intelligence and what will be necessary to fix it. Drawing on their experience in government administration, research, and the foreign service, they propose a radical rethinking of the United States' intelligence needs in the post-Cold War world. In addition, they offer a coherent and unified plan for reform that can simultaneously protect U. S. security and uphold the values of our democratic system.

As we now know, even during the Cold War, when intelligence was seen as a matter of life and death, our system served us badly. It provided unreliable information, which led to a grossly inflated military budget, as it wreaked havoc around the world, supporting corrupt regimes, promoting the drug trade, and repeatedly violating foreign and domestic laws. Protected by a shroud of secrecy, it paid no price for its mistakes. Instead it grew larger and more insulated every year.

Taking into consideration our strategic interests abroad as well as the price of covert operations in dollars, in reliability, and in good will, every American taxpayer can be informed by and will want to read this book. National Insecurity is essential for readers interested in contemporary political issues, international relations, U.S. history, public policy issues, foreign policy, intelligence reform, and political science.
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National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War

National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War

by Craig Eisendrath
National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War

National Insecurity: U.S. Intelligence After the Cold War

by Craig Eisendrath

eBook

$33.95 

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Overview

A drastic reform of intelligence activities is long overdue. The Cold War has been over for ten years. No country threatens this nation's existence. Yet we still spend billions of dollars on covert action and espionage.

In National Insecurity ten prominent experts describe, from an insider perspective, what went wrong with U.S. intelligence and what will be necessary to fix it. Drawing on their experience in government administration, research, and the foreign service, they propose a radical rethinking of the United States' intelligence needs in the post-Cold War world. In addition, they offer a coherent and unified plan for reform that can simultaneously protect U. S. security and uphold the values of our democratic system.

As we now know, even during the Cold War, when intelligence was seen as a matter of life and death, our system served us badly. It provided unreliable information, which led to a grossly inflated military budget, as it wreaked havoc around the world, supporting corrupt regimes, promoting the drug trade, and repeatedly violating foreign and domestic laws. Protected by a shroud of secrecy, it paid no price for its mistakes. Instead it grew larger and more insulated every year.

Taking into consideration our strategic interests abroad as well as the price of covert operations in dollars, in reliability, and in good will, every American taxpayer can be informed by and will want to read this book. National Insecurity is essential for readers interested in contemporary political issues, international relations, U.S. history, public policy issues, foreign policy, intelligence reform, and political science.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781592137794
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 11/28/2000
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 723 KB

About the Author

Craig Eisendrath is Senior Fellow at the Center for International Policy in Washington, D.C. He has served as a U.S. Foreign Service Officer.

CONTRIBUTORS: Roger Hilsman, Melvin A. Goodman, Robert E. White, Robert V. Kelley, Jack A. Blum, Kate Doyle, Alfred W. McCoy, Robert Dreyfuss, Richard A. Stubbing, Pat M. Holt, and the editor.

Table of Contents

Contents


Foreword
        Senator Tom Harkin

Introduction
        Craig Eisendrath

1.   After the Cold War: The Need for Intelligence
        Roger Hilsman

2.   Espionage and Covert Action
        Melvin A. Goodman

3.   Too Many Spies, Too Little Intelligence
        Robert E. White

4.   CIA-Foreign Service Relations
        Robert V. Kelley

5.   Covert Operations: The Blowback Problem
        Jack A. Blum

6.   The End of Secrecy: U.S. National Security and the New Openness Movement
        Kate Doyle

7.   Mission Myopia: Narcotics as Fallout From the CIA's Covert Wars
        Alfred W. McCoy

8.   TECHINT: The NSA, the NRO, and NIMA
        Robert Dreyfuss

9.   Improving the Output of Intelligence: Priorities, Managerial Changes, and Funding
        Richard A. Stubbing

10.  Who's Watching the Store? Executive-Branch and Congressional Surveillance
        Pat M. Holt

Conclusions
        Craig Eisendrath

Selected Bibliography

About The Center for International Policy

About the Contributors

Index
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