Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center for International Security and Cooperation Stanford University


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December 6th, 2012

Companies open their own intelligence shops to manage risks

in the news: Foreign Policy on December 5, 2012

Amy Zegart explains why private companies are developing their own intelligence units that conduct surveillance and analyze information to protect their businesses and personnel against geopolitical risks. She argues that these units, which operate much like the CIA, are becoming necessary to conduct global business. Read more »



November 28th, 2012

Why cultures clash when military leaders run the CIA

Op-ed: Foreign Policy on November 28, 2012

Amy Zegart explains why military leaders have a difficult time running intelligence agencies. Even though both deal with national security, their organizational structures create very different operational cultures.




October 12th, 2012

1962 or 2012? Intelligence agencies still failing 50 years on

in the news: Foreign Policy on October 10, 2012

CISAC Faculty Member Amy Zegart outlines how 50 years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the CIA and other intelligence agencies still operate in an organizational and psychological mindset that favors consensus and consistency. These "invisible pressures" led to intelligence failures in Cuba in 1962 and Iraq in 2002. Read more »



September 5th, 2012

Zegart launches biweekly intelligence column at Foreign Policy

CISAC, FSI Stanford News

CISAC affiliated faculty member Amy Zegart has launched a biweekly intelligence column at www.foreignpolicy.com. The inaugural column examines the new book by an ex-Navy SEAL about the Osama bin Laden raid and the challenges of operating within our 20th century secrecy regime in the increasingly wired world of the 21st century. The column will run every other Wednesday. Read more »



August 17th, 2012

Deciphering the National Intelligence Estimates on Iran's nuclear program

Op-ed: Foreign Policy on August 15, 2012

CISAC Affiliate Jeffrey Lewis, founder of the blog ArmsControlWonk.com, explains that journalists and foreign policy elites have misunderstood the National Intelligence Estimates on Iran's nuclear program, particularly the 2007 report, which claimed that Iran halted its covert nuclear weapons program in 2003. Lewis spoke with FSI's Tom Fingar, who explained that the report intended to signal that Tehran is sensitive to international pressure, and that it could restart the nuclear weapons program at a later date.




August 17th, 2011

Thomas Fingar: A new book explores the role of U.S. intelligence

CISAC, FSI Stanford Announcement

In his new book, Reducing Uncertainty: Intelligence Analysis and National Security, Thomas Fingar, the former Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Analysis, explains what intelligence analysts do, how they do it, and how they are affected by the political context that shapes and uses their work.



June 6th, 2011

Noted intelligence expert Amy Zegart joins CISAC

Announcement

The Center for International Security and Cooperation is pleased to welcome Dr. Amy Zegart as an affiliated faculty member at CISAC in conjunction with her position as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. Read more »




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