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INTELLIGENCE EDUCATION a la DISSERTATION DISCUSSION

INTELLIGENCE EDUCATION a la DISSERTATION DISCUSSION. COL (Ret) Bill Spracher Doctoral Candidate, Higher Education Administration Program George Washington University Coordinating Editor Center for Strategic Intelligence Research National Defense Intelligence College

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INTELLIGENCE EDUCATION a la DISSERTATION DISCUSSION

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  1. INTELLIGENCE EDUCATIONa la DISSERTATION DISCUSSION COL (Ret) Bill Spracher Doctoral Candidate, Higher Education Administration Program George Washington University Coordinating Editor Center for Strategic Intelligence Research National Defense Intelligence College 9th Annual International Colloquium on Intelligence Notre Dame College 10 July 2007

  2. Dissertation Vitals Title: Intelligence Studies in U.S. Civilian Colleges and Universities: Developing for a Dangerous World Principal Research Question: Can formally designated intelligence studies in the nation’s colleges and universities contribute definitively to the development of professionals in the Intelligence Community who are well chosen and intellectually prepared to function on the job in fully competent fashion? Methodology: Written survey to educators (≈125), shorter questionnaire to junior analysts (≈25), selected interviews with pioneers in the field (≈5)

  3. What Am I Doing Here??? Method to my Madness: -- Career Army MI officer (30 yrs, last 15 essentially as a LATAM FAO) -- Several education-related assignments -- Taught intel subjects at USMA, NDU, and JMIC -- Interested in intel from an international perspective (experience with USARSA, UNPKO, IADC, Defense Attaché System, CHDS) -- Attendee at 1999 JMIC annual conference on teaching intelligence -- Regular participant in Colloquium and IAFIE activities since 2004 -- Contractor independence What the Future Holds: -- Retirement (again) -- Travel -- Teaching -- Research

  4. What this Dissertation Is Not -- Not about training -- Not about international educational programs -- Not about governmental programs -- Not about tactical- or operational-level intelligence support -- Not a treatise on critical thinking per se What it does try to do: -- Examine intelligence studies programs in a broad range of civilian institutions across the U.S. -- Determine if they are producing critical thinkers for the profession who are prepared intellectually to support policy-/decision-makers -- Explore how outcomes are being assessed/expectations realized

  5. Topics of Personal Interest -- Outcomes assessment, performance evaluation, & core competencies -- Open source intel research -- Lessons learned/best practices -- Fusion of the INTs and blurring of boundaries between intel & ops; strategic & tactical; foreign & domestic; national security, law enforcement, & competitive/business intel -- Emphasis on cultural intel and foreign language capability -- Control, oversight, and accountability -- Ethics -- Intelligence-industrial complex -- Information sharing via professional journals, conferences/symposia/colloquia, & the Internet/Intelink -- Opportunities through internships, research fellowships, international exchanges, & consortia -- NIU/CAE/public-private collaboration

  6. Bright Lights from the Past(Chap 2 All-Stars) -- Sherman Kent vs. Willmoore Kendall -- Ray Cline -- Roger Hilsman -- Robin Winks -- Walter Pforzheimer -- Vernon Walters -- Robert Gates -- Irving Janis -- Graham Allison -- Sam Wilson

  7. Food for Thought(from presentation at2006 Colloquium on “Intelligence as an Academic Discipline”) “In the continuing search for better understanding of the dynamics of national security policy, the contribution strategic intelligence makes to policy has recently been attracting academic attention … My premise is that disciplined inquiry [emphasis added] into the intelligence process serves the interests of higher education, scholarship, and an informed public opinion.” (Ray S. Cline, former CIA official and noted author, “Foreword” to Teaching Intelligence in the Mid-1990s: A Survey of College and University Courses on the Subject of Intelligence, by Judith M. Fontaine, 1992) “To some extent, the teaching of intelligence has been hobbled by the fact that it is a relatively new academic endeavor … We are concerned with an academic subject that is barely 25 years old.” (Dr. Mark M. Lowenthal, Executive Director, IAFIE, “Teaching Intelligence: The Intellectual Challenges,” JMIC Occasional Paper No. 5, A Flourishing Craft: Teaching Intelligence Studies, June 1999)

  8. What Can You Do to Help? -- Provide advice and suggestions -- Participate in survey pre-test now -- Promptly return official survey if you receive one; ensure survey gets into the right hands -- Spread the gospel about intel studies -- Remain engaged with each other, with IAFIE, and with other professional intel organizations -- Keep teaching and learning – it’s a lifelong enterprise!

  9. A Final Thought “Greater collaboration is vital because no single agency has the capacity to survey all the available information. . . Intelligence can only help inform and shape decisions if it is processed through the mind of an analyst who resolves any conflicts and ambiguities. . . The intelligence community can still learn a lot from commercial best practices and best-in-class analytic technologies to help its analysts sift through data and more rapidly identify key insights. . . Old cultures and practices need to be changed. ” -- VADM (Ret) Mike McConnell, Director of National Intelligence, from “Overhauling Intelligence,” Foreign Affairs, July/August 2007)

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