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ID154866
Title ProperCollection ‘management by crisis
Other Title Informationstrategic targeting and interrogation at Guantanamo Bay
LanguageENG
AuthorPearlman, Adam R
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines human intelligence collection in wartime, and offers a methodology to help determine the relative success or failure of the detainee interrogation mission at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (GTMO). It surveys the relevant background on GTMO, a brief history on interrogations during World War II and Vietnam, and draws comparisons among them to be considered in potential future mass-interrogation missions. Drawing from documentary research and two dozen original interviews, it argues that, to the extent an intelligence mission was one of the purposes of transferring detainees to GTMO, the relevant metric of success is whether collectors were able to obtain more or ‘better’ intelligence from the detainees than they would have been able to in-theater. At the strategic level, then, GTMO’s value to intelligence collectors is to be assessed at the margins, rather than the absolute value of the information educed.
`In' analytical NoteIntelligence and National Security Vol. 32, No.6; Oct 2017: p.849-866
Journal SourceIntelligence and National Security Vol: 32 No 6
Key WordsInterrogation ;  Guantanamo Bay ;  Collection Management ;  StrategicTtargeting


 
 
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