
From Booklist
As
noted in the foreword, with the creation of Homeland Security, the need
for a standard vocabulary for the intelligence community became a
priority. This concise dictionary is an attempt to document the
operational and evolving intelligence vocabulary.
More than 600
entries range in length from one or two sentences to a paragraph, with
the occasional page-long entry (derogatory information, for example).
Librarians and information professionals will find the five pages of
definitions for terms beginning with information as defined in the
intelligence context to be of special interest. Starting with analysis
and finishing with information warriors, the way the intelligence
community perceives informationand its use is unique. Mixed in with the
entries for intelligence terms are brief definitions of key events that
were either missed, affected, or successfully noted through the use of
intelligence, including Iran, fall of the shah; Korean War;and
Yom-Kippur War. The dictionary concludes with 20 pages of notes along
with an appendix of what author Goldman considers essential Web sites
of intelligence agencies in the U.S. as well as selected international
agencies. Before the dictionary proper are 20 pages of acronyms used in
the U.S. government and military
http://rapidshare.com/files/81329450/WordsofIntelligence.rar
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