ID | 181664 |
Title Proper | Politics is not everything |
Other Title Information | new perspectives on the public disclosure of intelligence by states |
Language | ENG |
Author | Riemer, Ofek |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Why do states deliberately disclose hard-earned intelligence? For political and operational reasons, Official Public Intelligence Disclosure (OPID) is often considered counterintuitive and ill-advised. However, as this practice proliferates in international affairs in recent years, extant scholarship emphasizes domestic political incentives for its employment. Drawing on interviews with policy, defense, and media figures in Israel, this article generates alternative perspectives. First, in keeping with the dictates of contemporary information and media environment, states engage in OPID as a performative act designed to enhance diplomacy and shape international agenda. Second, in the age of limited wars, instead of being amassed purely for large-scale escalation, selective disclosure of intelligence can be weaponized against adversaries whose operations and very survival depend on secrecy, so as to shape their behavior below the threshold of war. The article advances our understanding of the innovative ways in which intelligence can be strategically employed in the information age. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary Security Policy Vol. 42, No.4; Oct 2021: p.554-583 |
Journal Source | Contemporary Security Policy Vol: 42 No 4 |
Key Words | Intelligence ; Israel ; Secrecy ; Performativity ; Foreign Policy |