Peacekeeping Intelligence: Emerging Concepts for t - Hardcover

Wies-platje-dame-pauline-neville-jones

 
9780971566125: Peacekeeping Intelligence: Emerging Concepts for t

Inhaltsangabe

Each year millions of people die, are displaced, become diseased, or suffer severe depravations at the hands of rogue states, predatory ethnic groups or tribes, or ruthless terrorist and criminal organizations. Around the globe, while recognizing the important efforts of selected Nation-States and selected Non-Governmental Organizations, only one organization can be said to be truly concerned with global security and global prosperity in the common interest of all mankind: the United Nations. Unfortunately, the United Nations has chosen to ignore the proven process of "intelligence" by confusing it with espionage. Intelligence is not about espionage, it is about rationalized decision-support in which global sources of information in many languages and many mediums (oral, written, imaged) are deliberated collected, processed, analyzed, and presented to decision-makers in order to reduce uncertainty, suggest alternatives, and otherwise make instability more manageable. This book is the first book to bring together a combination of experienced United Nations military commanders, experienced national intelligence leaders, and scholars of United Nations and insurgency history. It combines the results of the first annual conference on peacekeeping intelligence help in The Netherlands in November 2002, with eight seminal works from the past, and three vital references for the future--extracts from the Brahimi Report with intelligence-related footnotes; a completely new Peacekeeping Intelligence Leadership Digest 1.0 distilled from the entire book into 35 pages; and pointers to both the three North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) doctrinal documents on Open Source Intelligence (OSINT), and to a selective group of recent references, most available online. This book is, in essence, "Ref A" for the future of intelligence at the United Nations.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Ben de Jong is secretary of the Netherlands Intelligence Studies Association (NISA). Wies Platje is a retired lieutenant commander of the Royal Netherlands Navy. For over thirty years he held various functions within the Netherlands Navy Intelligence Service. Robert David Steele (Vivas) is the founder of OSS.NET, a web site dedicated to international intelligence reform including improved use of open source intelligence (OSINT). Dame Pauline Neville-Jones is Chairman of QinetiQ Group plc, formerly the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA) which is in the process of privatisation by the British Government. She is also International Governor of the BBC with special responsibility for BBC World Service (radio) and BBC World (TV). Patrick C. Cammaert is a major-general of the Marine Corps of the Royal Netherlands Navy. Since early 2003 he is Military Advisor to the Secretary-general of the United Nations. Until October 2002 he was in command of the United Nations Mission to Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE). Walter Dorn is an Associate Professor at the Royal Military College of Canada, a senior member of the external faculty of the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre and an Adjunct Research Professor at Carleton University. Sir David Ramsbotham is General (Ret.), British Army, and has served as a consultant to the UN on peacekeeping issues in Cambodia, Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon, Somalia, and Yugoslavia. Hugh Smith is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics, University College (UNSW), Australian Defence Force Academy, New South Wales, and was the Founding Director of the Australian Defence Studies Centre at the Academy. Biographic information on the many other contributors is contained in the book.

Aus dem Klappentext

Peacekeeping operations and peace support operations, as all military operations, need intelligence if disasters such as the one that took place in Srebenica in the former Yugoslavia in the summer of 1995 are to be avoided. Too often in the past, intelligence during peacekeeping operations has been neglected, due to the resistance against it within the United Nations and other international organisations and due to the fact that states regard intelligence as a national prerogative and are not by nature inclined to share it. The contributions to this book convincingly demonstrate the importance of intelligence during peacekeeping operations and the necessity of creating an intelligence structure within international organisations such as the United Nations.

Egmond van Rijn, vice-admiral (ret.)
Royal Netherlands Navy
Chairman of the IDL/NISA Conference on Peacekeeping and Intelligence

Cover Photo: On 31 October 2002, Patrick C. Cammaert, major-general of the Marine Corps of the Royal Netherlands Navy hands over the command of the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) to the British major-general R. Gordon. From 1 January 2003 General Cammaert is the Military Advisor to the Secretary-General of the United Nations.

Photo Credit: Audio Visual Service Royal Netherlands Navy

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