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Handbook of Warning Intelligence (Hardcover, Complete and Declassified Edition)
Loot Price: R2,499
Discovery Miles 24 990
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Handbook of Warning Intelligence (Hardcover, Complete and Declassified Edition)
Series: Security and Professional Intelligence Education Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This new and final edition is a follow-up to the author's first
book, Anticipating Surprise (University Press of America, 2002) and
the Handbook of Warning Intelligence (Scarecrow Press, 2010). The
first book was an abridged version of Grabo's 1972 manuscript, of
which only 200 pages were allowed to be published by the
government. The second book was published after it was agreed that
the last 10 chapters would remain classified. These final 10
chapters have recently been released by the government and complete
the manuscript as it was originally intended to be published by the
author in 1972. The Handbook of Warning Intelligence was written
during the cold war and was classified for 40 years. Originally
written as a manual for training intelligence analysts, it explains
the fundamentals of intelligence analysis and forecasting,
discusses military analysis, as well as the difficulties in
understanding political, civil, and economic analysis and assessing
what it means for analysts to have "warning judgment." Much of what
Grabo wrote in her book seems to appear in many of the numerous
commission reports that emerged after the 9/11 attacks. However,
her book was written in response to the "surprise attack" of the
Soviet Union's invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. According to the
author, that event was no surprise. And while analysts have to take
some of the blame for their failure to strenuously present their
case that the threat was real and imminent, what occurred was a
failure by policymakers to listen to the warning intelligence
reports that were written at the time. In these last chapters,
Grabo discusses scenarios where the United States will need to take
action, especially describing Soviet indicators of such action. She
also talks on how to influence policymakers to take, or not take,
action based on intelligence. After the Soviet Union fell, the
government was hesitant to release this information-especially
considering what's going on with Putin today.
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