Analysis: Should US spy agencies learn from France?
January 16, 2010 3 Comments

J.L. Bruguiere
By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS | intelNews.org |
What precisely is wrong with the US intelligence system? I have read several good analyses lately, all sparked by the disastrous Christmas holiday week, which included the Christmas Day bomber fiasco and the killing of seven CIA personnel in Afghanistan. One is written by ex-CIA operations officer Charles Faddis, who argues that the Agency’s central deficiency is that it places emphasis on process, rather than on mission accomplishment. Another, broader, analysis is authored by Ron Capps, the US Pentagon’s former director of human intelligence/counterintelligence operations in Afghanistan, who suggests that the way to break down bureaucratic walls between US intelligence agencies is to publish more unclassified reports. The most interesting commentary, however, is written by Paris-based Jean-Louis Bruguière, a French former Magistrate who led counterterrorism investigations from 1981 to 2007. Read more of this post













News you may have missed #0256
January 17, 2010 by intelNews Leave a comment
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with Afghanistan, Barack Obama, CIA, Comintern, Cuba, Development Alternatives Inc., diplomacy, espionage, history, Japan, NATO, News, news you may have missed, Pakistan, Predator drones, Richard Sorge, Russian embassy in Japan, Sorge spy ring, Stanley McChrystal, Tokyo, United States, US DoD, USSR, World War II, Yotoku Miyagi