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Global intelligence : the world's secret services today / Paul Todd and Jonathan Bloch.

By: Contributor(s): Series: Global issuesPublication details: London ; New York : Zed Books, 2003.Description: p. cmISBN:
  • 1842771132 (pbk.) :
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • JF1525.I6 G56 2003
Contents:
Introduction: Intelligence after 9/11 A New Internationalism? -- Defining the threat -- After the Berlin Wall -- Intelligence agencies today -- So, why is the issue of intelligence and security agencies still important? -- 'Terrorism': The Dark Side of Globalisation -- Terrorism and intelligence--Siamese twins? -- Islam and the myth of confrontation -- A new internationalism? The US experience before and after 9/11 -- Western Europe--rolling the new bandwagon -- Israel--'manipulating the Bush doctrine' -- A clash of bandwagons? -- Technologies of Surveillance -- The panoptic view--satellite surveillance on a global scale -- Echelon--who's on the watch list? -- Encryption and 'backdoors' -- The economic backdoor--state surveillance and the private sector -- The Third World, human rights and the Internet -- Intelligence and law enforcement--breaking down the firewall -- The dark glass--into the future -- US Intelligence: Back to the Future? -- The Gulf War and after: grasping the 'unipolar moment' -- 'Redefining national security'--Clinton and the rise of economic intelligence -- Iraq--'enormous market potential' -- Afghanistan, Pakistan and the legacy of William Casey -- Latin America--business as usual? -- Intelligence without policy or policy without intelligence? -- The European Union: New Purpose, Old Methods? -- The UK -- France -- Germany and the European Union -- Russia: From KGB to FSB and Back Again? -- The FSB--two coups and a demise exaggerated -- The SVR--'still in the big four' -- FAPSI -- Israel: the Living Security Dilemma? -- The main services -- The toll of 'targeted killings' -- Mossad's global reach -- The US connection: codenamed Jumbo -- Intelligence in the South: The Growth of the Virtual State -- The Middle East--the hidden hand syndrome -- Syria--the rise of the Mukhabarat state -- Iraq--'a sort of frenzy' -- Palestine -- India and Pakistan--the democratic deficit -- Burma--opposition and micro-management -- South Africa--the democratic chance -- Concluding Perspectives: Knowledge, Power and Accountability -- The new Iron Triangle -- Intelligence and accountability--bucking the trend? -- Looking to the future -- How to Research Your Intelligence Agency.
Summary: Global Intelligence Explains how the war on terrorism provides a wholly new context for the murky world that secret services and intelligence agencies operate in; Describes in detail how ultra-modern new technologies have vastly increased their power to spy abroad and eavesdrop at home; Tells us the changing priorities and working methods of the CIA and other US agencies, the FSB (successor to the KGB) in Russia, Britain and Western Europe's secret services, Mossad in Israel, and the various security services in developing countries. This up-to-date account raises important issues, including the new roles the secret services have found for themselves as they target 'rogue states', 'the war on drugs', and 'terrorists'. Most important of all, its authors explore the unresolved contradiction between the world of these secretive and unaccountable agencies operating on the fringes of the law, and the requirements of a free and democratic society. There is, they conclude, 'no easy walk to freedom'.
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books American University in Dubai American University in Dubai Main Collection JF 1525 .I6 G56 2003 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 645523

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: Intelligence after 9/11 A New Internationalism? -- Defining the threat -- After the Berlin Wall -- Intelligence agencies today -- So, why is the issue of intelligence and security agencies still important? -- 'Terrorism': The Dark Side of Globalisation -- Terrorism and intelligence--Siamese twins? -- Islam and the myth of confrontation -- A new internationalism? The US experience before and after 9/11 -- Western Europe--rolling the new bandwagon -- Israel--'manipulating the Bush doctrine' -- A clash of bandwagons? -- Technologies of Surveillance -- The panoptic view--satellite surveillance on a global scale -- Echelon--who's on the watch list? -- Encryption and 'backdoors' -- The economic backdoor--state surveillance and the private sector -- The Third World, human rights and the Internet -- Intelligence and law enforcement--breaking down the firewall -- The dark glass--into the future -- US Intelligence: Back to the Future? -- The Gulf War and after: grasping the 'unipolar moment' -- 'Redefining national security'--Clinton and the rise of economic intelligence -- Iraq--'enormous market potential' -- Afghanistan, Pakistan and the legacy of William Casey -- Latin America--business as usual? -- Intelligence without policy or policy without intelligence? -- The European Union: New Purpose, Old Methods? -- The UK -- France -- Germany and the European Union -- Russia: From KGB to FSB and Back Again? -- The FSB--two coups and a demise exaggerated -- The SVR--'still in the big four' -- FAPSI -- Israel: the Living Security Dilemma? -- The main services -- The toll of 'targeted killings' -- Mossad's global reach -- The US connection: codenamed Jumbo -- Intelligence in the South: The Growth of the Virtual State -- The Middle East--the hidden hand syndrome -- Syria--the rise of the Mukhabarat state -- Iraq--'a sort of frenzy' -- Palestine -- India and Pakistan--the democratic deficit -- Burma--opposition and micro-management -- South Africa--the democratic chance -- Concluding Perspectives: Knowledge, Power and Accountability -- The new Iron Triangle -- Intelligence and accountability--bucking the trend? -- Looking to the future -- How to Research Your Intelligence Agency.

Global Intelligence Explains how the war on terrorism provides a wholly new context for the murky world that secret services and intelligence agencies operate in; Describes in detail how ultra-modern new technologies have vastly increased their power to spy abroad and eavesdrop at home; Tells us the changing priorities and working methods of the CIA and other US agencies, the FSB (successor to the KGB) in Russia, Britain and Western Europe's secret services, Mossad in Israel, and the various security services in developing countries. This up-to-date account raises important issues, including the new roles the secret services have found for themselves as they target 'rogue states', 'the war on drugs', and 'terrorists'. Most important of all, its authors explore the unresolved contradiction between the world of these secretive and unaccountable agencies operating on the fringes of the law, and the requirements of a free and democratic society. There is, they conclude, 'no easy walk to freedom'.

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