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U.S. Intelligence: Evolution and Anatomy Second Edition

✍ Scribed by Mark M. Lowenthal


Publisher
Praeger Publishers
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Leaves
196
Series
The Washington Papers
Edition
2 Sub
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


No major twentieth-century power has so short a history of national intellligence agencies or activities as does the United States, and few have been as public or as tumultuous. A major debate has now opened over the future structure, size, and role of U.S. intelligence in the aftermath of the cold war. This unique, and fully updated, book is a history of the U.S. intelligence community--as well as a detailed description of the organization and function of the major components of the community as they existed at the beginning of 1992. The history of the intelligence community can be divided into three distinct periods. From its creation in 1947 until the revelations and investigations of 1974-1975, the intelligence community operated under fairly broad grants of authority based on trust. After the Nixon administration, a previously dormant Congress was galvanized to write new oversight provisions and also took on a greater role as a shaper and consumer of intelligence. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war in 1991, the intelligence community found its role and even its necessity questioned due to the sudden absence of its major target. Lowenthal emphasizes that a competent and challenged intelligence capability is an essential part of the U.S. national security structure, despite the status of external events or threats. The major requirement of this structure, he says, is providing timely, objective, and pointed analysis to policymakers across a wide range of issues.

✦ Table of Contents


Title Page......Page 3
Copyright Page......Page 4
Contents......Page 5
Foreword......Page 9
About the Author......Page 13
Summary......Page 15
I. The Evolution of U.S. Intelligence......Page 19
Introduction......Page 21
Prehistory......Page 24
Response to World War II......Page 25
The Legacy of OSS......Page 29
The Demise of the OSS......Page 31
The Eberstadt Study......Page 32
The Birth and Growth of the CIG......Page 33
The National Security Act......Page 34
The Early CIA: Operational and Analytical Diversions......Page 37
The Smith Reforms and New Agencies......Page 40
ONE: National Estimates......Page 42
DCI Dulles......Page 43
The Missile Gap and the Bay of Pigs......Page 46
4. Intelligence and an Activist Foreign Policy......Page 48
INR and DIA......Page 49
DCI McCone......Page 50
DCI Helms and Assistant for National Security Affairs Kissinger......Page 52
The Schlesinger and Colby Reforms......Page 54
Disclosures......Page 57
Executive and Congressional Investigations......Page 58
An Assessment......Page 63
Team A-Team B......Page 65
Jimmy Carter and U.S. Intelligence......Page 67
DCI Turner......Page 70
Congressional Oversight......Page 71
Questionable Intelligence: Iran......Page 74
SALT II......Page 75
Congressional and Executive Reform......Page 80
The Carter Years: An Assessment......Page 83
DCI Casey......Page 84
The Reagan Doctrine......Page 87
The Year of the Spy......Page 91
The Iran-Contra Affair......Page 94
Congressional Oversight, 1986-1989......Page 99
Gorbachev and the New Demands of Arms Control......Page 101
Assessment......Page 103
8. Intelligence in the Post-Cold War World......Page 105
The Oversight Struggle, 1989-1991......Page 106
The Debate over Post-Cold War Intelligence......Page 108
The Gulf War......Page 110
Reprise: Robert Gates and Iran-Contra......Page 112
Efforts at Post-Cold War Reorganization......Page 115
9. Observations......Page 118
II. The Anatomy of U.S. Intelligence......Page 121
Director of Central Intelligence......Page 123
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence......Page 128
National Foreign Intelligence Council......Page 129
National Security Council......Page 130
Office of Management and Budget......Page 133
Bureau of Intelligence and Research......Page 134
Central Intelligence Agency......Page 136
Defense Intelligence Agency......Page 141
Defense Specialized Intelligence Offices......Page 145
Federal Bureau of Investigation......Page 146
Military Services......Page 148
National Intelligence Council......Page 150
National Security Agency......Page 152
Other Departments......Page 154
Congressional Oversight......Page 156
Executive Oversight......Page 159
13. Observations......Page 162
Notes......Page 164
Index......Page 187


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