The history of modern intelligence analysis reveals a deep structural paradox: while intelligence organizations have grown into elaborate, bureaucratically mature institutions, the analytical function within them has remained fundamentally artisanal. This incongruity — large-scale institutions coupled with a craft-like analytical core —has shaped the organizational culture, personnel practices, and intellectual development of the intelligence community for more than seven decades. Understanding this paradox requires examining the historical evolution of intelligence analysis not as a linear path toward professionalization, but as a persistent struggle between the inherited culture of a guild and the unrealized potential of a modern profession.
Andrey Spiridonov (Fri,) studied this question.