Reference: Jack Devine on Tomorrow’s Spygames

Articles & Chapters, Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)
Jack Devine on Future of Spying

Jack Devine is the finest manager we have ever known, and the only one we know of who has never let a case officer miss a deadline without asking why.  Former Acting Deputy Director of Operations while appointed as ADDO, former head of Latin America Division, he managed the Afghan Task Force whose outcomes are have been tactically and operationally successful and strategically painful.  His signal idea in the above article is a Secretary of Intelligence.  It's not a bad idea, if accompanied by legislation that gives the Secretary the powers that the Director of Naitonal Intelligence (DNI) does not have now, but a better idea would be a Secretary for Education, Intelligence, and Research, with CIA converted into Director of Classified Intelligence, a new Director of Open Source Intelligence, NSA becomes the all-souorce processing center, and the NRO gets folded into NGA at the same time that USGS is absorbed by NGA.  The article also falls prey to the acceptance of glibness by others–cyberwar, for example, is not something we can just throw money at–there are not enough qualified cyber-warriors with US citizenship eligible for clearances to become competent in less than a decade–cyberwar is going to have to be a multinational endeavor, and the Chinese are twenty years ahead of us in both offense and defense.  Reality can be such a pesky creature to deal with….

With a tip of the hat to the Association for Intelligence Officers (AFIO), which provided this in Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies (Fall 2009), pages 49-55 (7 pages).  Although AFIO has not opened its doors to all multinational multifunctional intelligence professionals across the eight tribes of intelligence as we expect it to one day, its web site and publications are openly available and we encourage one and all to subscribe.

See also:

2009: Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Trilogy which includes:

Intelligence for the President–AND Everyone Else

+ Fixing the White House and National Intelligence

+ Human Intelligence (HUMINT): All Humans, All Minds, All the Time

Journal: Director of National Intelligence Alleges….

Search: Intelligence Reform

Search: The Future of OSINT [is M4IS2-Multinational]

Search: Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield

Reference: 73 Rules of Tradecraft (Dulles via Srodes)

Articles & Chapters, Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)
Allen Dulles on Tradecraft

With a tip of the hat to the Association for Intelligence Officers (AFIO), which provided this in Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies (Fall 2009), pages 49-55 (7 pages).  Although AFIO has not opened its doors to all multinational multifunctional intelligence professionals across the eight tribes of intelligence as we expect it to one day, its web site and publications are openly available and we encourage one and all to subscribe.

See also:  Review: Allen Dulles–Master of Spies by the same author of the above article, James Srodes.

Reference: Counterintelligence Open Source

Director of National Intelligence et al (IC), Methods & Process
Original Source Online
Original Source Online

September 2009.

Just noticed.  A fine first effort that also provides a snap-shot of where the Open Source Center is now.

For more advanced thoughts, see Librarian's Paradox as well as Handbooks and Historic Contributions.

Seven Presentations from the Counterintelligence Open Source Symposium:

Continue reading “Reference: Counterintelligence Open Source”

Journal: DNI Describes Losing Hand

Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)
Full Speech Online
Full Speech Online

Phi Beta Iota: Speaking to the World Affairs Council on 6 November 2009, Admiral Dennis Blair, USN (Ret), now the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), offered up a faint-praise indictment of a national intelligence community that is pedestrian and mis-directed.

Drawing on Global Trends 2025 and the National Intelligence Strategy, both of which are  lacking (see our comments at links), here is what he said and did not say.

Top five prognostications:

Climate change accepted as a given top priority;  state system still the foundation for analysis;  technology search still focused on extraction of fossil fuels; potential for conflict grrowing;  in 2025 the US will still be #1 power on Earth.

He stated that the goal of the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) is to help policy-makers make wise policy; to provide effective actionable intelligence to the Whole of Government (WoG); and to move the IC toward the cutting edge of technology.

Here is what he did not say, and our critical comments:

Continue reading “Journal: DNI Describes Losing Hand”

Journal: Secret Intelligence Costs Taxpayer $75 Billion a Year

Budgets & Funding, Director of National Intelligence et al (IC), Government

Full Story Online
Full Story Online

Secretive spending on U.S. intelligence disclosed

By Adam Entous

Reuters

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Intelligence activities across the U.S. government and military cost a total of $75 billion a year, the nation's top intelligence official said on Tuesday, disclosing an overall number long shrouded in secrecy.

Phi Beta Iota: So much for all those who questioned our long-standing repetitive statement that secret U.S. intelligence is costing the U.S. taxpayer $65 billion a year.  We were deliberately off by $10 billion.  Now that we have established this, perhaps the time has come for both the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the General Accountability Office (GAO) to ask the obvious question: What does the taxpayer get for this vast sum, and how could it be spent better?

Reference: National Intelligence Strategy 2009

Director of National Intelligence et al (IC)

Phi Beta Iota: Admiral Dennis Blair, USN (Ret) has signed off on the 2009 update and revision of the National Intelligence Strategy of 2005, and on balance we give it a solid C with the observation that there is no “break-out” in this documents.  (Continued below the fold–A for school solution, F for real-world need, C over-all)

USA Intelligence Strategy 2009
USA Intelligence Strategy 2009

Continue reading “Reference: National Intelligence Strategy 2009”