Crafting an Intelligence Community: Papers of the First Four DCIs

Abstract

Symposium Overview: For nearly six decades, the director of central intelligence (DCI) headed the world's most important intelligence agency and oversaw the largest, most sophisticated, and most productive set of intelligence services ever known. From 1946 to 2005, 19 DCIs served through 10 changes in president; scores of major and minor wars, civil wars, military incursions, and other armed conflicts; two energy crises; a global recession; the specter of nuclear holocaust and the pursuit of arms control; the raising of the Berlin Wall and the fall of the Iron Curtain; the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction; and the arrival of international terrorism on the shores of America and the war against it overseas. During that time, the DCIs participated in or oversaw several vital contributions that intelligence made to US national security: strategic warning, clandestine collection, independent analysis, overhead reconnaissance, support to warfighters and peacekeepers, arms control verification, encouragement of democracy, and counterterrorism.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 13, 2012
Accession Number
ADA625723

Entities

Organizations

  • George Mason University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Cyber
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Civil War
  • Commerce
  • Congress
  • Department Of State
  • Governments
  • International Organizations
  • Law
  • National Security
  • Organizational Structure
  • Personnel Management
  • Political Science
  • Public Policy
  • Recreation
  • Second World War
  • Students
  • Surveillance

Readers

  • Irregular Warfare and Special Operations Cyberspace Operations against Adversarial Threats.
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.
  • Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering.