Still relevant today. So very little has changed in the past twenty years, mostly because the mind-sets are the same.
1992 Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield: The Marine Corps Viewpoint
Memoranda1992 E3i: Ethics, Ecology, Evolution, & intelligence (An Alternative Paradigm)
About the Idea, Articles & Chapters, Information Society, Intelligence (Collective & Quantum), Intelligence (Public), Values, Ethics, Sustainable Evolution“E3i: Ethics, Ecology, Evolution, and Intelligence” was inspired in part by Walter Truett Anderson's 1987 book, To Govern Evolution: Further Adventures of the Political Animal, and accepted by Howard Rheingold, whose 1986 book, Tools for Thought: The History and Future of Mind-Expanding Technology, was my first exposure to “intelligence” outside the secret bunker–my first realization that the secret world was isolated from a larger reality.
1992 SIGNAL Leaner Marine Corps Faces Meaner Global Challenge
Articles & ChaptersThe Transformation of War and the Future of the Corps
Articles & ChaptersThe Transformation of War and the Future of the Corps
Robert David Steele
Adjunct Faculty
Marine Corps University
Cleared for Publication 28 April 1992
Intelligence Primer: How to Inform Policy
Articles & ChaptersIntelligence Primer: How to Inform Policy
Robert David Steele
Adjunct Faculty
Marine Corps University
Cleared for Publication 16 March 1992
NOTE: For reasons unknown, this version did not include endnotes. It draws heavily on the work of Jack Davis and Greg Treverton. Proper credit to them can be found in ON INTELLIGENCE: Spies and Secrecy in an Open World, Fairfax, VA: Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, 2000.
1992 National Intelligence Council: Open Source Task Force–A Vision for the Future
Director of National Intelligence et al (IC), Historic Contributions, History of Opposition1992 was a good year. Everyone tried to do the right thing, but the forces of passive aggressive opposition were over-whelming. Within the military, only the U.S. Marine Corps took this seriiously, and within the U.S. Intelligence Community (more like an archipelago) only the Defense Intelligence Agency–and within that agency only one man, Paul Wallner, took this seriously. Everywhere we went, “nice to have, not invented here, certainly not interested in redirecting funds” was the refrain. Below is a decent effort by decent people.