Policy Briefs & Testimonies

13 Items

Policy Brief

An Intelligence Agenda for a New Administration

December 2020

America’s Intelligence Community (IC) faces a daunting array of traditional national security challenges. Terrorism remains a persistent global problem in form of Islamic extremism as well as far-right nationalism. Russia, China and other nation state threats have become a higher priority after a long period of neglect. Regional conflicts simmer and occasionally boil over, reminding us that our agencies must provide global coverage. And we are now engaged in perpetual cyber conflict, with ambient digital espionage and conflict raging across global networks.

Preventing Terrorist Attacks: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom

AP Photo

Policy Brief - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

Preventing Terrorist Attacks: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom

| May 5, 2008

Why do terrorist attacks frequently succeed, even though later investigations almost always show that warnings had been available but were either misunderstood or ignored?  Conventional wisdom, as seen in the 9/11 Commission Report, holds that disasters such as the 9/11 attacks have been caused by failures of analytical imagination, a lack of long-term strategic intelligence on the threat, and organizational limitations that prevent the U.S. intelligence community from being able to “connect the dots” of the existing intelligence.