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Truth to Power - A History of the U.S. National Intelligence Council (Hardcover)
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Truth to Power - A History of the U.S. National Intelligence Council (Hardcover)
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Truth to Power, the first-ever history of the U.S. National
Intelligence Council (NIC), is told through the reflections of its
eight Chairs in the period from the end of the Cold War until 2017.
Co-editors Robert Hutchings and Gregory Treverton add a substantial
introduction placing the NIC in its historical context going all
the way back to the Board of National Estimates in the 1940s, as
well as a concluding chapter that highlights key themes and
judgments. This historic mission of this remarkable but
little-known organization, now almost forty years old, is strategic
intelligence assessment in service of senior American foreign
policymakers. Its signature inside products, National Intelligence
Estimates, are now accompanied by the NIC's every-four-years Global
Trends. Unclassified, Global Trends has become a noted NIC brand,
its release awaited by officials, academics and private sector
managers around the world. Each chapter places its particular
period of the NIC's history in context (the global situation, the
administration, the intelligence community) and assesses the most
important issues with which the NIC grappled during the period,
acknowledging failures as well as claiming successes. For example,
Hutchings' chapter examines the invasion and occupation of Iraq,
the fallout from the ill-fated Iraqi WMD estimate, the debate over
intelligence community reform, and the year-long National
Intelligence Council 2020 project. With the creation of the
Director of National Intelligence in 2005, the NIC's mission
mushroomed to include direct intelligence support to the two main
policymaking committees in the government: the Principals Committee
(cabinet secretaries in the foreign affairs departments) and the
Deputies Committee (their deputies or number threes). The mission
shift took the NIC directly into the thick of the action but at
some cost to its abilities to do strategic thinking: of some 700
NIC papers in 2016, more than half were responses to questions from
the National Security Adviser or her deputies, most, though hardly
all, of which were current and tactical, not longer-term and
strategic.
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