edited by Craig Eisendrath ; foreword by Tom Harkin.
Philadelphia :
Temple University Press,
2000.
viii, 241 pages ;
24 cm
"A project of the Center for International Policy."
Includes bibliographical references (pages 223-225) and index.
After the Cold War: the need for intelligence / Roger Hilsman -- Espionage and covert action / Melvin A. Goodman -- Too many spies, too little intelligence / Robert E. White -- CIA-foreign service relations / Robert V. Keeley -- Covert operations: the blowback problem / Jack A. Blum -- The end of secrecy: US national security and the new openness movement / Kate Doyle -- Mission myopia: narcotics as fallout from the CIA's covert wars / Alfred W. McCoy -- Techint: the NSA, the NRO, and NIMA / Robert Dreyfuss -- Improving the output of intelligence: priorities, managerial changes, and funding / Richard A. Stubbing -- Who's watching the store? Executive-branch and congressional surveillance / Pat M. Holt.
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"In National Insecurity ten prominent experts describe, from an insider perspective, what went wrong with the U.S. intelligence system and what needs to be done to fix it. Drawing on their experience in government administration, research, and the foreign service, they propose a radical rethinking of the United States' intelligence needs in the post-Cold War world. In addition, they offer a coherent and unified plan for reform that can protect U.S. security while upholding the values of our democratic system."--Jacket.