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Analysis, War, and Decision: Why Intelligence Failures Are Inevitable

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Richard K. Betts
Affiliation:
Brookings Institution, Harvard University
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Abstract

Strategic intelligence failures cannot be prevented by organizational solutions to problems of analysis and communication. Analytic certainty is precluded by ambiguity of evidence, ambivalence of judgment, and atrophy of institutional reforms designed to avert failures. Many sources of error are unresolvable paradoxes and dilemmas rather than curable pathologies. Major failures in attack warning, operational evaluation, and intelligence for strategic planning are due primarily to leaders’ psychological attributes rather than to analysts’ failures to detect relevant data. Since analysis and decision are interactive rather than sequential processes, and authorities often hear but dismiss correct estimates, intelligence failure is inseparable from policy failure. Solutions most often proposed—worst-case analysis, multiple advocacy, devil's advocacy, organizational consolidation, sanctions and incentives for analysts, and cognitive rehabilitation—are either impractical because of constraints on the leaders’ time, or they are mixed blessings because they create new problems in the course of solving old ones.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1978

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References

1 For example, Klaus Knorr, “Failures in National Intelligence Estimates: The Case of the Cuban Missiles,” World Politics, xvi (April 1964), 455, 465–66; Ransom, Harry Howe, “Strategic Intelligence and Foreign Policy,” World Politics, xxvii (October 1974), 145Google Scholar.

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9 The U.S. intelligence community includes the CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), National Security Agency, the intelligence branches of each military service, the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, the intelligence units of the Treasury and Energy Departments, and the FBI. Before 1973, coordination for national estimates was done through the Office of National Estimates, and since then, through the National Intelligence Officers. The Intelligence Community Staff assists the Director of Central Intelligence in managing allocation of resources and reviewing the agencies' performance.

10 HSCI, Hearings (fn. 4), 656–57.

11 Wilensky, , Organizational Intelligence (New York: Basic Books 1967), 4262Google Scholar, 126, 179.

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14 Quoted in SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), I, 82.

15 ibid., 267, 276; SSCI, Staff Report, Covert Action in Chile 1963–1973, 94th Cong., 1st sess., 1975, 48–49. The Senate Committee deplored the tendency of decision makers to focus on the latest raw data rather than on refined analyses, a practice that contributed to the intelligence failure in the 1974 Cyprus crisis. SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), I, 443. But the failure in the October War was largely due to the reverse phenomenon: disregarding warning indicators because they contradicted finished intelligence that minimized the possibility of war. HSCI Draft Report (fn. 4), 78; Ben-Zvi (fn. 4), 386, 394; Perlmutter (fn. 4), 453.

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18 Quoted in SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), 1, 274.

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20 Hughes (fn. 2), 43.

21 “The textbooks agree, of course, that we should only believe reliable intelligence, and should never cease to be suspicious, but what is the use of such feeble maxims? They belong to that wisdom which for want of anything better scribblers of systems and compendia resort to when they run out of ideas.” Clausewitz, Carl von, On War, ed. and trans, by Howard, Michaeland Paret, Peter (Princeton: Princeton University Press 1976), 117Google Scholar.

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23 See McGuire, William J., “Selective Exposure: A Summing Up,” in Abelson, R. P. and others, eds., Theories of Cognitive Consistency (Chicago: Rand McNally 1968)Google Scholar, and Janis, Irving L. and Mann, Leon, Decision Maying: A Psychological Analysis of Conflict, Choice, and Commitment (New York: Free Press 1977), 213–14Google Scholar.

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25 See for example, U.S., Department of Defense, The Senator Gravel Edition: The Pentagon Papers (Boston: Beacon Press 1971)Google Scholar [hereafter cited as Pentagon Papers], Vol. II, 99; Fitzgerald, Frances, Fire in the Lake (Boston: Atlantic-Little, Brown 1972), 364Google Scholar; Special National Intelligence Estimate 53–64, “Chances for a Stable Government in South Vietnam,” September 18, 1964, and McGeorge Bundy's covering letter to the President, in LBJL/NSF-VNCF, Vol. XIII, item 48.

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28 SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), I, 61–62; HSCI Draft Report (fn. 4), 82.

29 McGarvey (fn. 26), 16.

30 Shlaim (fn. 2), 375–77. The proposals follow, with their U.S. analogues noted in parentheses: appoint a special intelligence adviser to the Prime Minister (Director of Central Intelligence) to supplement the military chief of intelligence; reinforce the Foreign Ministry's research department (Bureau of Intelligence and Research); more autonomy for non-military intelligence (CIA); amend rules for transmitting raw intelligence to research agencies, the Defense Minister, and the Prime Minister (routing of signals intelligence from the National Security Agency); restructure military intelligence (creation of DIA in 1961); establish a central evaluation unit (Office of National Estimates). On the U.S. intelligence failure in 1973, see the HSCI Draft Report (fn. 4), 78–79.

31 Shlaim (fn. 2), 379; Handel (fn. 4), 62–63.

32 ibid., 55.

33 Shlaim (fn. 2), 358–59. The Israeli command estimated a higher probability of attack in May 1973 than it did in October. Having been proved wrong in May, Chief of Staff Elazar lost credibility in challenging intelligence officers, complained that he could no longer argue effectively against them, and consequently was unable to influence his colleagues when he was right. Personal communication from Michael Handel, November 15, 1977.

34 Washington Post, November 27, 1977, p. A17.

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36 Westmoreland, , A Soldier Reports (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday 1976), 316Google Scholar. See the postmortem by the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, quoted in Schandler, Herbert Y., The Unmaking of a President (Princeton: Princeton University Press 1977), 70Google Scholar, 76, 79–80.

37 Wohlstetter (fn. 4), 69.

38 George, “The Case for Multiple Advocacy in Making Foreign Policy,” American Political Science Review, Vol. 66 (September 1972). My usage of the term multiple advocacy is looser than George's.

39 Graff, Henry F., The Tuesday Cabinet (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall 1970), 6871Google Scholar; Leslie H. Gelb with Richard K. Betts, The Irony of Vietnam: The System Worked (Washington, D.C.: Brookings, forthcoming), chap. 4; Ball memorandum of October 5, 1964, reprinted as “Top Secret: The Prophecy the President Rejected,” Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 230 (July 1972)Google Scholar; McCone, memorandum of April 2, 1965, in LBJL/NSF-VNCF, Troop Decision folder, item 14b.

40 Betts (fn. 5), 199–202; Schandler (fn. 36), 177. George (fn. 38), 759, stipulates that multiple advocacy requires “no major maldistribution” of power, influence, competence, information, analytic resources, and bargaining skills. But, except for resources and the right to representation, the foregoing are subjective factors that can rarely be equalized by design. If they are equalized, in the context of imperfect data and time pressure, erroneous arguments as well as accurate ones will be reinforced. Non-expert principals have difficulty arbitrating intellectually between experts who disagree.

41 Quoted in Steinbruner (fn. 22), 332.

42 Clausewitz (fn. 21), 117–18; HSCI, Hearings (fn. 4), 634–36; William J. Barnds, “Intelligence and Policymaking in an Institutional Context,” in U.S., Commission on the Organization of the Government for the Conduct of Foreign Policy [hereafter cited as Murphy Commission], Appendices (Washington, D.C.: G.P.O., June 1975)Google Scholar, Vol. VII, 32.

43 HSCI, Hearings (fn. 4), 778.

44 SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), IV, 57; Hilsman, Roger, Strategic Intelligence and National Decisions (Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press 1956), 40Google Scholar. During brief service as just a low-level staff member of the National Security Council, even I never had time to read all the intelligence analyses relevant to my work.

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49 ibid., 416.

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53 SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), I, 352. A valid criticism is that military personnel systems and promotion standards penalized intelligence officers, thus encouraging competent officers to avoid intelligence assignments. This situation was rectified in the service intelligence agencies by the early 1970's, but not within DIA. ibid.; Betts (fn. 5), 19697.

54 SSCI, Final Report (fn. 7), I, 77–82. See also U.S., Congress, Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Hearings, National Security Act Amendment, 92d Cong., 2d sess., 1972, 14–24.

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61 See, for example, Blaker, James and Hamilton, Andrew, Assessing the NATO/Warsaw Pact Military Balance (Washington, D.C.: Congressional Budget Office, December 1977)Google Scholar

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63 Pentagon Papers, IV, 111–12, 115–24, 217–32. CIA critiques of bombing results began even before the Tonkin Gulf crisis. CIA/OCI, Current Intelligence Memorandum, “Effectiveness of T-28 Strikes in Laos,” June 26, 1964; CIA/DDI, Intelligence Memorandum, “Communist Reaction to Barrel Roll Missions,” December 29, 1964. But ambivalence remained even within the CIA, which occasionally issued more sanguine evaluations—e.g., CIA Memorandum for National Security Council, “The Situation in Vietnam,” June 28, 1965 (which McGeorge Bundy called directly to the President's attention), and CIA/OCI, Intelligence Memorandum, “Interdiction of Communist Infiltration Routes in Vietnam,” June 24, 1965. (All memoranda are in LBJL/NSF-VNCF, Vol. I, item 5, Vol. Ill, items 28, 28a, 28b, Vol. VI A, items 4, 5, 8.) See also Pentagon Papers, IV, 71–74. See also the opposing assessments of the CIA, the civilian analysts in the Pentagon, and the Joint Chiefs in NSSM-i (the Nixon Administration's initial review of Vietnam policy), reprinted in the Congressional Record, Vol. 118, part 13, 92d Cong., 2d sess., May 10,1972, pp. 16749–836.