Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, June 10, 2019

How To Teach 2500 Years Of Intelligence History In About An Hour

Original version of the Art of War by Sun-Tzu
As with most survey courses, Introduction to Intelligence Studies has a ton of information that it needs to cover--all of it an inch deep and mile wide.  One of the most difficult parts of the syllabus to teach, however, is intelligence history.

Whether you start with the Bible or, as I do, with Chapter 13 of The Art Of War, you still have 2500 years of history to cover and typically about an hour long class to do it.  Don't get me wrong.  I think the history of intelligence ought to be at least a full course in any intelligence studies curriculum.  The truth is, though, you just don't have time to do it justice in a typical Intel 101 course.

I was confronted with this exact problem last year.  I had not taught first-year students for years, and when the time came in the syllabus to introduce these students to intel history, I was at a bit of a loss.  Some professors gloss over ancient history and start with the National Security Act of 1947.  Some compress it even more and focus entirely on post Cold War intelligence history.  Others take a more expansive view and select interesting stories from different periods of time to illustrate the general role of intelligence across history.  

All of these approaches are legitimate given the topic and the time constraints.  I wanted, however, to try to make the history of intel a bit more manageable for students new to the discipline.  I hit on an approach that makes sense to me and seemed to work well with the students.  I call it the Four Ages Of Intelligence.

The first age I call the Age of Concentration.  In ancient times, power and knowledge was concentrated in the hands of a relatively small number of people.  The king or queen, their generals, and the small number of officers and courtiers who could read or write were typically both the originators and targets of intelligence efforts.  These efforts, in turn, were often guided by the most senior people in a government.  Sun Tzu noted, "Hence it is that which none in the whole army are more intimate relations to be maintained than with spies."  George Washington, as well, was famous not only as a general but also as a spymaster.  

The Age of Concentration lasted, in my mind, from earliest times to about the early 1800's.  The nature of warfare began to change rapidly after the American and French Revolutions. 
Washington and the capture of the Hessians at Trenton.  
Large citizen armies and significant technological advances (railroads, telegraphs, photography, balloons!) made the process of running spy rings and collating and analyzing the information they collected too large for any one person or even a small group of people to manage.  


Enter the Age of Professionalization.  The 1800's saw the rise of the staff system and the modern civil service to help generals and leaders manage all the things these more modern militaries and governments had to do.  Of course, there had always been courtiers and others to do the king's business but now there was a need for a large number of professionals to deal with the ever-growing complexities of society.  The need for more professionals, in turn, demanded standardized processes that could be taught.  

For me, the Age of Professionalization lasted until the end of World War II when the Age of Institutionalization began.  Governments, particularly the US Government, began to see the need for permanent and relatively large intelligence organizations as a fundamental part of government.   
Logos of the CIA And KGB
Staffs and budgets grew.  Many organizations came (more or less) out of the shadows.  CIA, KGB, MI5 (and 6), ISI, and MSS all became well known abbreviations for intelligence agencies.  The need for intelligence-like collection and analysis of information became obvious in other areas.  Law enforcement agencies, businesses, and even international organizations started to develop "intelligence units" within their organizational structures.  


All of this lasted until about 1994 when, with the advent of the World Wide Web, the Age of Democratization began.   Seven years ago (!), I wrote an article called "Top Five Things Only Spies Used To Do But Everyone Does Now."  I talked about a whole bunch of things, like using sophisticated ciphers to encrypt data and examining detailed satellite photos, that used to be the purview of spies and spies alone.  Since then, it has only gotten worse.  Massive internet based deception operations and the rise of deepfake technology is turning us all into spymasters, weighing and sorting information wheat from information chaff.  Not only the threats but also the opportunities have grown exponentially.   For savvy users, there is also more good information, a greater ability to connect and learn, to understand the things that are critical to their success or failure but are outside their control, than ever before--and to do this on a personal rather than institutional level.

There are a couple of additional teaching points worth making here.  First is the role of information technology in all of this.  As the technology for communicating and coordinating activities has improved, the intelligence task has become more and more complicated.  This, in turn, has required the use of more and more people to manage the process, and that has changed how the process is done.  Other disciplines have been forced to evolve in the face of technological change.  It is no surprise, then, that intelligence is also subject to similar evolutionary pressures.

It is also noteworthy, however, that the various ages of intelligence have tended to become shorter with the near-logarithmic growth in technological capabilities.  In fact, when you map the length of the four ages on a logarithmic scale (see below) and draw a trendline, you can see a pretty good fit.  It also appears that the length of the current age, the Age of Democratization, might be a bit past its sell-by date.  This, of course, begs the question:  What age comes next?  I'm voting for the Age of Anarchy...and I am only half kidding.


Is this a perfect way of thinking about the history of intelligence?  No, of course not.  There are many, many exceptions to these broad patterns that I see.  Still, in a survey class, with limited time to cover the topic, I think focusing on these broad patterns that seemed to dominate makes some sense.  

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Is ISI Really The Best Intelligence Agency In The World?

http://nationalpostnews.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/spies.gif
According to the National Post, Canada's conservative newspaper, it is.

That is just one of the interesting tidbits reported in this graphic titled, The State of The Global Spy Game (Download the PDF here).

Following Pakistan's ISI comes Mossad in the number 2 slot, MI 6 taking third and the CIA following up in fourth place.

In addition to the Top Ten list, most of the graphic outlines a series of assassinations, explosions, spying, cyber spying and "convenient accidents" that the Post ties to various intelligence organizations over the last ten years.

Finally, there are some charts which claim to be based on some of Richards Heuer's work regarding the demographics of spies; where they come from in government, how much education they have, etc.  The graphic provides no comparative data to see if any of the categories identified are larger or smaller than they are in the relevant population from which they are drawn so it is difficult to draw conclusions but intriguing nonetheless.

Given the nature of the article and difficulty associated with making these kinds of judgements, I am not surprised at the results but it is still an interesting question to ask:  Who has the world's best intel service? 

(Hat tip to Christophe Deschamps at Outils Froid and his must follow Twitter feed!)

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Top Ten Uncracked Codes (Funnbee.info via INTELST)

INTELST, the US Army's listserve for intelligence professionals, pointed me this morning towards a Funnbee.info post that catalogs the 10 most famous uncracked codes (in case you are bored over the holidays...).

The list includes:

  • Kryptos
  • Linear A
  • The Phaistos Disk
  • The Shugborough Hall Inscription
  • The Chinese Gold Bar Cipher
  • The Beale Ciphers
  • The Voynich Manuscript
  • The Dorabella Cipher
  • The Chaocipher
  • The D'agapeyeff Cipher

For more info on any of these, click on the link above!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Three Great Databases, Three Cool Resources (Link List)

I have run across a number of interesting databases and resources over the last several weeks. Here is a quick roundup:

World Economic Outlook Database. You have to love the IMF! They have put together a great database of economic forecasts that goes out to 2013 on a wide variety of indicators in just about every country in the world. Authoritative, comprehensive, detailed and free! Not much more you could ask for...

History Research Online. This site is simply an extensive, organized list of history sites on the web and therein lies its utility. It is not entirely clear who runs this site but I found it to be useful in pointing to a number of sites I had not heard about previously.

The Global Terrorism Database. All of the terrorism analysts will no doubt be familiar with this excellent National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (at the University Of Maryland) product but, for the rest of us, it is a great one stop shop for historical information about terrorist attacks. I found the database to be particularly useful in helping me search for patterns and trends I wanted to identify for a recent classroom exercise in crisis briefing and reporting.

Printable Paper. How many times have you needed a sheet of graph paper or some such and not had any on hand? With the Printable Paper site you can download a wide variety of templates for printing out on ordinary bond paper for free.

Picture-based Computer Tutorials. We often have our students push the outside of the capability envelope of MS Office and other software tools we use in our classes. This site has a number of useful picture-based tutorials on how to do all sorts of routine and advanced operations in Word, Excel and Powerpoint as well as in a variety of other types of software.

36 Beautiful Resume Ideas That Work. While I can't comment on how well they might work, I found many of these resume ideas to be useful in thinking about resumes in a new way. If you are looking for ideas on how you might make your resume "pop", there is likely something here for you.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Digital Tampering in the Media, Politics and Law (Dartmouth)


Extremely cool website at Dartmouth that talks about the history of photo deception and fakery. In fact, it seems to have begun shortly after the invention of the camera (Note Lincoln's head on John C. Calhoun's body to the left)...

Bad Intelligence: America's History of Bungled Spying (Alternet.org)

Interesting article by Larry Beinhart about the costs of secrecy and the intel capabilities of the US on Alternet this morning. It seems to focus on the negatives and, even the few positives it reports, it manages to turn into negatives. It is likely that only an intel historian with a deep knowledge of the facts would be able to contradict or even add nuance to the parade of horribles. CIA historian Nicholas Dujmovic tried to do exactly that in a recent edition of CIA's in-house journal, Studies In Intelligence, with respect to Tim Weiner's recent book Legacy of Ashes (which Beinhart cites). Weiner, a Pulitzer Prize winner, went on to receive the National Book Award for Legacy of Ashes.