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Anticipating Surprise, originally written as a manual for training
intelligence analysts during the Cold War, has been declassified
and condensed to provide wider audiences with an inside look at
intelligence gathering and analysis for strategic warning. Cynthia
Grabo defines the essential steps in the warning process, examines
distinctive ingredients of the analytic method of intelligence
gathering, and discusses the guidelines for assessing the meaning
of gathered information. Since the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks on America, intelligence collection and analysis has been
hotly debated. In this book, Grabo suggests ways of improving
warning assessments that better convey warnings to policymakers and
military commanders who are responsible for taking appropriate
action to avert disaster.
Assigned to the National Indications Center, Cynthia Grabo served
as a senior researcher and writer for the U.S. Watch Committee
throughout its existence (1950 to 1975), and in its successor, the
Strategic Warning Staff. During this time she saw the need to
capture the institutional memory associated with strategic warning.
With three decades of experience in the Intelligence Community, she
saw intelligence and warning failures in Korea, Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, and Cuba. In the summer of 1972, the DIA published her
"Handbook of Warning Intelligence" as a classified document,
followed by two additional classified volumes, one in the fall of
1972 and the last in 1974. These declassified books have now been
condensed from the original three volumes into this one. Ms.
Grabo's authoritative interpretation of an appropriate analytic
strategy for intelligence-based warning is here presented in a
commercial reprint of this classic study. (Originally published by
the Joint Military Intelligence College)
Assigned to the National Indications Center, Cynthia Grabo served
as a senior researcher and writer for the U.S. Watch Committee
throughout its existence (1950 to 1975), and in its successor, the
Strategic Warning Staff. During this time she saw the need to
capture the institutional memory associated with strategic warning.
With three decades of experience in the Intelligence Community, she
saw intelligence and warning failures in Korea, Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, and Cuba. In the summer of 1972, the DIA published her
"Handbook of Warning Intelligence" as a classified document,
followed by two additional classified volumes, one in the fall of
1972 and the last in 1974. These declassified books have now been
condensed from the original three volumes into this one. Ms.
Grabo's authoritative interpretation of an appropriate analytic
strategy for intelligence-based warning is here presented in a
commercial reprint of this classic study. (Originally published by
the Joint Military Intelligence College)
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