Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
The expansion of intelligence studies into new areas shows that intelligence behaves differently in different environments. Taking Military Intelligence as a context, this article will frame and define Combat Intelligence as a distinct field of activity within that context, with a unique set of behaviours and characteristics. It will also demonstrate that examination of Combat Intelligence through perspectives used to look at state level intelligence – role, oversight, failure, politicisation, and processes – offers up new insights into the production and usePage 3 of 3 of intelligence in a military context that improve our understanding of it as a discrete sphere of activity.
David Strachan-Morris (Fri,) studied this question.