<p><b> "<i>Intelligence Collection</i></b> is an excellent choice for both students and the intelligence community. It is well organized, follows a logical approach, and systematically covers each aspect of intelligence collection."</p>

- Dr. Daniel J. Benny,

<p><b>"</b>This book will add tremendously to the study of intelligence, as it lays out the sources of intelligence in a very logical sequence, and in a very easily understandable format."</p>

- Ken Stiles,

<p><b>"</b>Robert Clark<b> </b>has developed a text with a comprehensive survey and taxonomy of the myriad disciplines within intelligence collection. He usefully places these in the framework of structure, function, and process. This workman-like approach will be helpful to students new to this subject."</p>

- Kenneth deGraffenreid,

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<p>"I like the extensive use of anecdotal examples, based on actual situations. Each topic’s explicit examples provide significant interest as you read through the text."</p>

- Robert Duval,

This comprehensive book by one of the foremost authorities in the field offers systematic and analytical coverage of the "how and why" of intelligence collection across its three major stages—the front end (planning), collection, and the back end (processing, exploitation, and dissemination). The book provides a fresh, logical, and easily understandable view of complex collection systems used worldwide. Its ground-breaking organizational approach facilitates understanding and cross-INT collaboration, highlighting the similarities and differences among the collection INTs. The first part of the book explains how the literal INTs—open source, human intelligence, communications intelligence, and cyber collection—work. The second part focuses on nonliteral or technical INTs including imagery, electronic intelligence, and measurements and signatures intelligence. All chapters use a common format based on systems analysis methodology, detailing function, process, and structure of the collection disciplines. The third part is a complete chapter discussing the complexities of collection management in the United States. Rich, full color illustrations accompany the text with examples throughout the book on topics as diverse as battlespace situational awareness, terrorism, weapons proliferation, criminal networks, treaty monitoring, and identity intelligence.
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This user-friendly book by one of the foremost authorities in the field offers systematic and comprehensive coverage of the "what and how" of intelligence collection, including the processing and exploitation of both literal and nonliteral information.
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1. Introduction I. LITERAL COLLECTION 2. Open Source Intelligence 3. Human Intelligence 4. Communications Intelligence 5. Cyber Collection II. NONLITERAL COLLECTION 6. Overview of Nonliteral Collection 7. Collection Sensors 8. Collection Platforms 9. Optical Imaging 10. Radiometric and Spectral Imaging 11. Radar 12. Synthetic Aperture Radar 13. Passive RF 14. Acoustic and Seismic Sensing 15. Materials Intelligence 16. Biological, Medical, and Biometric Intelligence 17. Materiel Acquisition and Exploitation III. COLLECTION MANAGEMENT STRATEGY 18. Managing Intelligence Collection Glossary SIGINT - William Nolte Open Source - Eliot Jardines GEOINT - Darryl Murdock MASINT - John Morris HUMINT - Michael Althoff, William Huntington
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781452271859
Publisert
2013-10-30
Utgiver
Vendor
CQ Press
Vekt
840 gr
Høyde
231 mm
Bredde
190 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
552

Forfatter

Biographical note

Robert M. Clark has more than five decades of U.S. intelligence community experience. A USAF lieutenant colonel (retired), Dr. Clark served as an electronics warfare officer and intelligence officer. At the CIA, he was a senior analyst and group chief responsible for developing analytic methodologies. He was cofounder and CEO of the Scientific and Technical Analysis Corporation, a privately held company serving the U.S. intelligence community. Clark holds an SB from MIT, a PhD in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois, and a JD from George Washington University. Beyond analyzing wicked intelligence issues, his passion is writing on the topic of intelligence. His books include Intelligence Analysis: A Target-Centric Approach (5th edition, 2016), The Technical Collection of Intelligence (2010), and Intelligence Collection (2014). He is coauthor, with Dr. William Mitchell, of Target-Centric Network Modeling (2015) and Deception: Counterdeception and Counterintelligence (2019); and coeditor, with Dr. Mark Lowenthal, of Intelligence Collection: The Five Disciplines (2015). Dr. Clark also develops and teaches courses for audiences in academia, national intelligence, and the military. He currently serves as an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins University teaching graduate courses.