<p>[C]ompelling reading for anyone who has thought about how to analyze information.</p>

Wall Street Journal

<p>[The Intelligence Intellectuals] fills a useful gap for readers and historians because it creates a comprehensive, yet objective, accounting of intelligence reforms during a critical time.</p>

Journal of Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism

<p>It is a very well-researched history of the forces that shaped American intelligence.</p>

Listener

See all

<p>Historians interested in intelligence expertise will find rich details....Grace performs a stellar service, providing fresh primary sources that illuminate the early years of the CIA and making a strong case.</p>

H-Net

<p>Grace's research, which is mostly drawn from primary sources, paints a vivid picture....The Intelligence Intellectuals: Social Scientists and the Making of the CIA, clearly and succinctly depicts a critical period in the history of American intelligence analysis and deserves a spot on the overflowing bookshelves of Cold War historians and intelligence scholars.</p>

The Cipher Brief

The untold story of how America's brightest academic minds revolutionized intelligence analysis at the CIA

In the early days of the Cold War, the United States faced a crisis in intelligence analysis. A series of intelligence failures in 1949 and 1950, including the failure to warn about the North Korean invasion of South Korea, made it clear that gut instinct and traditional practices were no longer sufficient for intelligence analysis in the nuclear age. The new director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Walter Bedell Smith, had a mandate to reform it.

Based on new archival research in declassified documents and the participants' personal papers, The Intelligence Intellectuals reveals the neglected history of how America's brightest academic minds were recruited by the CIA to revolutionize intelligence analysis during this critical period. Peter C. Grace describes how the scientifically sound analysis methods that they introduced significantly helped the United States gain an advantage in the Cold War, and these new analysts legitimized the role of the recently created CIA in the national security community. Grace demonstrates how these professors—such as William Langer from Harvard, Sherman Kent from Yale, and Max Millikan from MIT—developed systematic approaches to intelligence analysis that shaped the CIA's methodology for decades to come.

Readers interested in the history of the Cold War and in intelligence, scholars of intelligence studies, Cold War historians, and intelligence practitioners seeking to understand their craft's foundations will all value this insightful history about the place of social science in national security.

Read more

Product details

ISBN
9781647126445
Published
2026-01-05
Publisher
Georgetown University Press
Weight
431 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
20 mm
Age
UP, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
306

Biographical note

Peter C. Grace is a lecturer on politics and international relations at the University of Otago, New Zealand. He is one of the volume editors of New Zealand's Foreign Policy under the Jacinda Ardern Government.