Intelligence Collection by Robert M. Clark―one of the foremost authorities in the field―offers systematic and analytic 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. Part one explains how the literal INTs such as communications intelligence and cyber collection work. Part two focuses on nonliteral INTs including imagery, electronic intelligence, and MASINT. All chapters use a common format based on systems analysis methodology, detailing function, process, and structure of the collection disciplines. Examples throughout the book highlight topics as diverse as battlespace situational awareness, terrorism, weapons proliferation, criminal networks, treaty monitoring, and identity intelligence.
Author(s): Robert M. Clark
Edition: 1
Publisher: CQ Press
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 552
Halftitle
Title
Copyright
Contents
Figures and Tables
Preface
Acronyms
1 Introduction
Part I. Literal Collection
2 Open Source Intelligence
3 Human Intelligence
4 Communications Intelligence
5 Cyber Collection
Part II. Noniteral 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
Part III. Collection Management and Strategy
18 Managing Intelligence Collection
Glossary
Index
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