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Managing the Private Spies - Use of Commercial Augmentation for Intelligence Operations (Paperback)
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Managing the Private Spies - Use of Commercial Augmentation for Intelligence Operations (Paperback)
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Loot Price R373
Discovery Miles 3 730
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The end of the Cold War presented a paradoxical dilemma for the
Intelligence Community (IC). The demise of the Soviet Union brought
about a significant downsizing of the nation's intelligence
apparatus while concurrently necessitating a major reallocation of
intelligence resources to cover a more complex array of
trans-national threats such as counter-proliferation, terrorism,
organized crime, drug trafficking, and ethnopolitical conflict. The
combination of shrinking budgets and expanding analytical
requirements placed enormous demands on the Community. Among the
most pressing challenges was the need for an on-demand, surged
intelligence capability for coverage over a diverse range of
operational requirements. A key recommendation of a 1996 House
Permanent Select Committee investigation of the nation's
intelligence capabilities called for the creation of a dynamic
surge capacity for crisis response. The Committee concluded that
such resources "need not be self-contained within the IC," but must
be quickly marshaled "without undue concerns about who owns the
assets." Several other independent reform studies at the time
proposed initiatives to satisfy surged collection demands by
leveraging nongovernmental resources. Despite these
recommendations, during the 1990s there was little effort to create
such a surge capacity. Bureaucratic inertia and lack of clear
consensus on an intelligence reform agenda made major initiatives
impossible. With the enormous intelligence demands of the Global
War on Terrorism (GWOT) the issue of surge capacity has reemerged
as a critical issue for community leaders. Collection management,
remote sensing, linguistic support, document exploitation,
interrogation, and technical analysis are just some intelligence
support functions currently being performed by private contractors.
This ad hoc response to meet the intelligence requirements of GWOT
operations has produced mixed results. One report strongly
recommended the permanent integration of commercial imagery
products into the conventional collection management cycle for
operational commanders. Conversely, a key fi nding of the Army
Inspector General's report on OIF detainee operations in Iraq
clearly identifi ed poor training and misuse of contract
interrogators as a contributing factor in detainee abuse. These
examples speak to both the promise and the liability of utilizing
commercial augmentation for intelligence surge capacity. Given the
current mismatch between operational requirements and intelligence
force structure, there will be continuing reliance on commercial
augmentation. As critical intelligence requirements are
increasingly resourced through commercial augmentation, IC leaders
must determine the appropriate roles for private sector firms and
provide effective plans for legal oversight, operational
integration, and management of contracted support. To date, few
studies have adequately considered the policy implications of
integrating non-governmental providers into the operational
intelligence cycle. GWOT operations have required significant
reliance on private sector resources for intelligence collection
and analysis but have done so without sufficient measures for
effective acquisition, management and accountability over
commercial providers. This study assesses the value of current
commercial activities used within DoD elements of the Intelligence
Community, particularly dealing with operational functions such as
analysis, collection management, document exploitation,
interrogation, production, and linguistic support. These functions
were selected due to the extensive use of commercial augmentation
in these areas during recent GWOT operations.
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