From combined arms to combined intelligence: philosophy, doctrine and operations/ James J. Wirtz and Jon J. Rosenwasser

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2010Subject(s): In: Intelligence and National Security Vol. 25 No.6 December 2010, pp.725-743 (99)Summary: 'Combined arms' operations have been a central tenet of military planning for nearly a century. They call for the integration of land, air and sea forces to achieve battlefield synergies. This philosophy has equal application to intelligence. The article advances the combined arms concept as a way to foster synergies across the intelligence disciplines - geospatial, signals, measures and signals, human, and most recently open source intelligence. It describes the strengths and weaknesses of each discipline in forming an analytical foundation for such a 'combined intelligence' and calls for developing theory to integrate the intelligence disciplines. The authors suggest that combined intelligence would confer several benefits, including more effective collection efforts and stronger countermeasures against adversary denial and deception. The articles concludes by calling for development of concepts and doctrine to put combined intelligence into practice.
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Journal Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals INTELLIGENCE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 37623-1001

'Combined arms' operations have been a central tenet of military planning for nearly a century. They call for the integration of land, air and sea forces to achieve battlefield synergies. This philosophy has equal application to intelligence. The article advances the combined arms concept as a way to foster synergies across the intelligence disciplines - geospatial, signals, measures and signals, human, and most recently open source intelligence. It describes the strengths and weaknesses of each discipline in forming an analytical foundation for such a 'combined intelligence' and calls for developing theory to integrate the intelligence disciplines. The authors suggest that combined intelligence would confer several benefits, including more effective collection efforts and stronger countermeasures against adversary denial and deception. The articles concludes by calling for development of concepts and doctrine to put combined intelligence into practice.

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