Mark Stout is a former senior lecturer and director of the Master of Arts in Global Security Studies program at Johns Hopkins University. He is also the co-author of The Terrorist Perspectives Project: Strategic and Operational Views of Al Qaeda and Associated Movements and co-editor of Spy Chiefs, Volume 1: Intelligence Leaders in the United States and United Kingdom.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Beginnings 2. Intelligence in War: The Caribbean and the Philippines, 1898-1902 3. Departmental Organization and Military Doctrine 4. Mexican Rehearsal 5. Mobilizing Intelligence for War in Europe, 1914-1918 6. "Secret Service": Espionage and Covert Action 7. Aerial Reconnaissance 8. Radio Intelligence 9. Modern War and Counterintelligence 10. Counterintelligence in Depths 11. Intelligence in Combat, 1918 12. Legacies Notes Sources and Bibliography Index
Entire libraries have been written about the Central Intelligence Agency and to a lesser extent the Office of Strategic Services. This has resulted in a lopsided and incomplete picture of the history of American intelligence. Transforming the intellectual landscape, Mark Stout delivers a magnificent historical narrative that charts the birth and development of modern American intelligence from the late nineteenth century through World War I. Stout provides a fascinating story packed not only with colorful characters and exciting escapades, but with careful scholarly assessments of subjects including intelligence collection, intelligence analysis, counterintelligence, and covert action. All future histories of American intelligence will need to reference this pioneering work." - Christopher R. Moran, professor of US national security at the University of Warwick, UK, and coeditor in chief of the Journal of Intelligence History

