|
Product Description
What is the role of intelligence agencies in strategy and policy? How do policymakers use (or misuse) intelligence estimates? When do intelligence-policy relations work best? How do intelligence-policy failures influence threat assessment, military strategy, and foreign policy? These questions are at the heart of recent national security controversies, including the 9/11 attacks and the war in Iraq. In both cases the relationship between intelligence and policy broke down―with disastrous consequences.
In Fixing the Facts, Joshua Rovner explores the complex interaction between intelligence and policy and shines a spotlight on the problem of politicization. Major episodes in the history of American foreign policy have been closely tied to the manipulation of intelligence estimates. Rovner describes how the Johnson administration dealt with the intelligence community during the Vietnam War; how President Nixon and President Ford politicized estimates on the Soviet Union; and how pressure from the George W. Bush administration contributed to flawed intelligence on Iraq. He also compares the U.S. case with the British experience between 1998 and 2003, and demonstrates that high-profile government inquiries in both countries were fundamentally wrong about what happened before the war.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Success and Failure in Limited War: Information and Strategy in the Korean, Vietnam, Persian Gulf, and Iraq Wars
- Reducing Uncertainty: Intelligence Analysis and National Security
- The Thinker's Toolkit: 14 Powerful Techniques for Problem Solving
- The President's Book of Secrets: The Untold Story of Intelligence Briefings to America's Presidents
- Red Team: How to Succeed By Thinking Like the Enemy
- Nuclear Rites: A Weapons Laboratory at the End of the Cold War
- The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life
- Spying Blind: The CIA, the FBI, and the Origins of 9/11
- Covert Regime Change: America's Secret Cold War (Cornell Studies in Security Affairs)
- What Good Is Grand Strategy?: Power and Purpose in American Statecraft from Harry S. Truman to George W. Bush
*If this is not the "Fixing the Facts: National Security and the Politics of Intelligence (Cornell Studies in Security Af" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 5, 2024 03:16 +08.