The Customer Metaphor and the Defense Intelligence Agency

Abstract

It is common in the intelligence community for agencies to refer to the policymakers and war fighters who use intelligence as their customers. The Defense Intelligence Agency, which was founded in 1961 over the resistance of the armed services and the Joint Staff, adopted and extended this metaphor as part of its bureaucratic survival strategy. DIA looked to the business world's customer orientation paradigm for ways to focus the agency on satisfying the needs of policymakers in order to justify independence and resources. Yet a comparison between business literature and intelligence theory shows that the customer metaphor is in many ways highly inappropriate for the profession of intelligence. The profit motive inherent in the term customer means that intelligence leaders who use it as a metaphor highlight the cynical aspects of bureaucratic politics, with negative consequences for the agency's credibility. Moreover, referring to intelligence users as customers connotes meanings that distort the subtle relationship between intelligence and policy. The mantra of customer orientation is to adopt the customer's mindset as the business's own, but the primary value of intelligence is the maintenance of an unbiased perspective independent of politics. Excising the word customer from the vernacular of DIA would be a simple but important step to improve the professionalism of the agency's analytic cadre.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 26, 2016
Accession Number
AD1039165

Entities

People

  • Andrew L Brooks

Organizations

  • School of Advanced Military Studies

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Counter WMD
  • Human Systems
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Commerce
  • Congress
  • Contingency Operations (Military)
  • Department Of Defense
  • Governments
  • Intelligence Analysis
  • Intelligence Community (United States)
  • International Organizations
  • Language
  • National Security
  • New York
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Public Policy
  • Second World War
  • United States
  • Weapons Of Mass Destruction

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.
  • Organizational Process Management (OPM).