U.S. Intelligence: Evolution and Anatomy
By (Author) Mark M. Lowenthal
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st August 1992
2nd edition
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Espionage and secret services
Social and cultural history
327.1273
Paperback
196
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
284g
No major 20th century power has so short a history of national intelligence agencies or activities as does the United States, and few have been as public or as tumultuous. A major debate has now opened over the future structure, size and role of US intelligence in the aftermath of the cold war. This book is a history of the US intelligence community - as well as a detailed description of the organisation and function of the major components of the community as they existed at the beginning of 1992. The history of the intelligence community can be divided into three distinct periods. From its creation in 1947 until the revelations and investigations of 1974 - 1975, the intelligence community operated under fairly broad grants of authority based on trust. After the Nixon administration, a previously dormant Congress was galvanised into writing new oversight provisions and also taking on a greater role as a shaper and consumer of intelligence. With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War in 1991, the intelligence community found its role and even its necessity questioned due to the sudden absence of its major target. Lowenthal emphasises that a competent and challenged intelligence capability is an essential part of the US national security structure, despite the status of external events or threats. The major requirement of this structure, he says, is providing timely, objective and pointed analysis to policymakers across a wide range of issues.
"Mark Lowenthal has done a service for all who are interested in U.S. intelligence. His book provides a helpful compendium of information on the development of the postwar U.S. intelligence community--information that many will find useful to have in one document of quite manageable length."- George A. Carver, Jr. John M. Olin Senior Fellow former Deputy to the Director of Central Intelligence
"This is a welcome and timely update of one of the most concise and objective guides to the history and structure of U.S. intelligence. Mark Lowenthal's book offers useful perspective on, and context for, how the intelligence community has developed and what have been the long-standing issues--many of which remain pertinent as we reshape intelligence to serve us in the post-cold war world."-Rep. Dave McCurdy Chairman, Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence U.S. House of Representatives
The book is clear and concise with extensive footnotes that provide sources for further study of specific issues or events.-Reviews and Things Cryptologic
"The book is clear and concise with extensive footnotes that provide sources for further study of specific issues or events."-Reviews and Things Cryptologic
MARK M. LOWENTHAL is the senior specialist in U.S. foreign policy at the Congressional Research Service (CRS) of the Library of Congress. From 1985 to 1989, he served in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, first as director of the Office of Strategic Forces Analysis and then as deputy assistant secretary for functional analysis. Prior to that he was a specialist in national defense at CRS and also served as head of CRS's Defense/Arms Control and Europe/Middle East/Africa sections. His publications include Leadership and Indecision: American War Planning and Policy Proccess, 1937-1942, as well as numerous articles and congressional studies on national security issues.