Protecting information, identifying undercover agents, and
operating clandestinely -- efforts known as counterintelligence --
are the primary objectives of terrorist groups evading detection by
intelligence and law enforcement officials. Some strategies work
well, some fail, and those tasked with tracking these groups are
deeply invested in the difference.
Discussing the challenges terrorist groups face as they multiply
and plot international attacks, while at the same time providing a
framework for decoding the strengths and weaknesses of their
counterintelligence, Blake W. Mobley provides an indispensable text
for the intelligence, military, homeland security, and law
enforcement fields. He outlines concrete steps for improving the
monitoring, disruption, and elimination of terrorist cells,
primarily by exploiting their mistakes in counterintelligence.
A key component of Mobley's approach is to identify and keep
close watch on areas that often exhibit weakness. While some
counterintelligence pathologies occur more frequently among certain
terrorist groups, destructive bureaucratic tendencies, such as
mistrust and paranoia, pervade all organizations. Through detailed
case studies, Mobley shows how to recognize and capitalize on these
shortcomings within a group's organizational structure, popular
support, and controlled territory, and he describes the tradeoffs
terrorist leaders make to maintain cohesion and power. He
ultimately shows that no group can achieve perfect secrecy while
functioning effectively and that every adaptation or new advantage
supposedly attained by these groups also produces new
vulnerabilities.
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