#Intelligence

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Blessed are the Peacekeepers, but they need Intelligence Officers
June 21, 2022 4 min. read

Peacekeeping operations have become a fixture within the international arena and core practice of international organizations since the end of the Cold War. However, these operations, particularly those run by the United Nations, have had a torrid relationship with intelligence collection and analysis. There has been consistent opposition by member states to establishing an intelligence […]

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Trump and the Russians: Collusion or Sowing Discord?
July 17, 2017 9 min. read

Did the Russians really need Trump’s collusion? And if not, could the appearances of collusion have been intended to foment chaos in U.S. politics?

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US Intel Officials: Comey Was ‘One Of The Most Loved Leaders’
May 16, 2017 4 min. read

Senior US intelligence officials reacted with dismay after learning moments before taking the stage at a speaking event in New York that director of the FBI James Comey had been fired.

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To Pardon or Not to Pardon: The New Snowden Debate
October 24, 2016 12 min. read

Proposals to pardon Edward Snowden before the end of the Obama administration have revived the debate over his actions and their consequences.

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GailForce: Aspen Security Forum Part I
August 4, 2016 9 min. read

The Aspen Security Forum offers the opportunity to hear directly from the people developing and executing our security strategy.

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The Warsaw Summit and the Future of NATO-Russia Relations
June 15, 2016 3 min. read

At a gathering of NATO’s defense ministers, it was announced that nearly 4,000 troops forming four battalions would be stationed in the Baltics and Poland.

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Would the 9/11 Hijackers’ Money Trail Raise Red Flags in Today’s System?
September 6, 2013 8 min. read

  If terrorists entered the U.S. today to conduct a 9/11-scale attack and used the same money-movement methods employed by the hijackers in 2001, it is “possible, but not probable” that their financial activities would bring them to the attention of intelligence and law-enforcement officials. That’s the assessment of Dennis M. Lormel, who led the […]

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Surprises in the Benghazi Talking Points
May 14, 2013 6 min. read

  On Friday, ABC News published all 11 versions of the Benghazi talking points that were written by the CIA at the request of Congress and used by Ambassador Susan Rice on several TV talk shows on Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012. It was widely reported for months that the original talking points had been edited […]

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On WMD and the Origins of the Iraq War
March 26, 2013 7 min. read

The tenth anniversary of the Iraq War is upon us, and we have been inundated with reminiscences and reflections on the war’s conduct and especially on its origins. One that struck me in particular came from Charles Duelfer, who argues that the Bush administration’s case for war — in particular, the part concerning weapons of […]

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Torture, Zero Dark Thirty, and the Need to Confront the Past
March 12, 2013 14 min. read

Prompted by the release of the Hollywood film “Zero Dark Thirty,” the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), a conservative Washington think tank, hosted a panel a few weeks back on the subject of “enhanced interrogation techniques” (EITs). The panelists were three high-ranking officials of the Central Intelligence Agency from the administration of George W. Bush. Gen. Michael […]

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Confusion in Benghazi
November 23, 2012 11 min. read

With the election behind us and David Petraeus having testified in closed House and Senate hearings, we may hope for a more measured and less emotional examination of the events in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012. In a previous post, I looked at some of the background behind the issue of post security. In […]

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