This volume examines the ethical issues that arise as a result of national security intelligence collection and analysis.
Powerful new technologies enable the collection, communication and analysis of national security data on an unprecedented scale. Data collection now plays a central role in intelligence practice, yet this development raises a host of ethical and national security problems, such as privacy; autonomy; threats to national security and democracy by foreign states; and accountability for liberal democracies. This volume provides a comprehensive set of in-depth ethical analyses of these problems by combining contributions from both ethics scholars and intelligence practitioners. It provides the reader with a practical understanding of relevant operations, the issues that they raise and analysis of how responses to these issues can be informed by a commitment to liberal democratic values. This combination of perspectives is crucial in providing an informed appreciation of ethical challenges that is also grounded in the realities of the practice of intelligence.
This book will be of great interest to all students of intelligence studies, ethics, security studies, foreign policy and international relations.
The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
This volume examines the ethical issues that arise as a result of national security intelligence collection and analysis.
Introduction Seumas Miller, Mitt Regan and Patrick F. Walsh Part I: The
Just Intelligence Model
1. Intelligence and the Just War Tradition: The Need
for a Flexible Ethical Framework Ross Bellaby
2. Truth-Seeking and the
Principles of Discrimination, Necessity, Proportionality and Reciprocity in
National Security Intelligence Activity Seumas Miller
3. The Technoethics of
Contemporary Intelligence Practice: A Framework for Analysis David Omand and
Mark Phythian Part II: Espionage
4. Ethics in the Recruiting and Handling of
Espionage Agents David Perry
5. The Rights of Foreign Intelligence Targets
Michael Skerker
6. Digital Sleeper Cells and the Ethics of Risk Management
Kevin Macnish
7. Intelligence Sharing Among Coalition Forces: Some Legal and
Ethical Challenges and Potential Solutions David Letts Part III: Bulk Data
Collection and Analysis
8. Privacy, Bulk Collection and "Operational Utility"
Tom Sorell
9. Surveillance, Intelligence and Ethics in a COVID19 World
Jessica Davis Part IV: Covert Operations
10. Ethics and Covert Action: The
"Third Option" in American Foreign Policy Loch Johnson
11. Jus ad Vim: War,
Peace and the Ethical Status of the In-between Nicholas Melgaard and David
Whetham Part V: Accountability
12. Reaching the Inflection Point: The
Hughes-Ryan Amendment and Intelligence Oversight Genevieve Lester and Frank
Jones
13. Congressional Oversight of US Intelligence Activities Mary DeRosa
14. Accountability for Covert Action in the United States and the United
Kingdom Mitt Regan and Michele Poole Part VI: Future Directions
15. GEOINT
and the Post-Secret World: Who Guards the Guards? Robert Cardillo
16.
Evolving Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Terrorism:
Intelligence Community Response and Ethical Challenges Patrick F. Walsh
17.
Reflections on the Future of Intelligence Gregory F. Treverton
Seumas Miller holds research positions at Charles Sturt University, Australia, TU Delft, the Netherlands and the University of Oxford, United Kingdom.
Mitt Regan is McDevitt Professor of Jurisprudence and Co-Director of the Center on National Security and the Law at Georgetown University Law Center, USA. He also serves as a senior fellow at the Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership at the U.S. Naval Academy.
Patrick F. Walsh is a former intelligence analyst and Associate Professor of intelligence and security studies at Charles Sturt University, Australia.