Acknowledgments | p. ix |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The Seven Motivations for Espionage | |
Espionage versus Intelligence: How the United States Goes About Spying | p. 9 |
Ideological Commitment | p. 23 |
Money and Treasure | p. 34 |
Revenge and Score Settling | p. 42 |
Sex, Intimidation, and Blackmail | p. 50 |
Spying for Reasons of Friendship or Ethnic or Religious Solidarity | p. 58 |
The Spy Game for the Sake of the Game | p. 71 |
America's Spying Competence Today | |
Intelligence Failures and Politicization | p. 82 |
The CIA in Transition: 1991 to the Present | p. 95 |
Intelligence Reform | p. 115 |
Spying in the Twenty-first Century | |
Actionable Intelligence and the Role of Law Enforcement, the Military, and Technology | p. 141 |
Foreign Liaison Services and Spying Lawfully | p. 157 |
Updating Operational and Analytical Tradecraft | p. 168 |
Why Spy? Should We Do It? | |
A Spy for the Twenty-first Century | p. 179 |
Conclusion: Can We Make Espionage Work in the Twenty-first Century? | p. 190 |
Notes | p. 197 |
Index | p. 203 |
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Excerpted from Why Spy?: Espionage in an Age of Uncertainty by Frederick P. Hitz
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