Title of article :
Perception and Politics in Intelligence Assessment: U.S. Estimates of the Soviet and “Rogue-State” Nuclear Threats
Author/Authors :
James H. Lebovic، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
United States estimates of Soviet nuclear goals and capabilities and the
current ‘‘rogue-state’’ nuclear threat reflected prevailing beliefs about
threat within the U.S. government and the relative influence of agencies
charged with threat assessment. This article establishes that the patterns
in formal Soviet threat assessment: (i) did not reflect a uniform
response to ‘‘external threat,’’ (ii) were inevitably tied to underlying
assumptions about adversary intent, and (iii) were susceptible then to
perceptual, organizational, and ⁄ or political influences within government.
Thus, threat assessments reflected the optimism and pessimism—
and political interests and ideologies—of those who participated
in the estimating process. The article concludes by examining these lessons
in light of the experiences and challenges of assessing threat from
small states harboring nuclear ambitions.
Keywords :
threat , CIA , nuclear weapons , SovietUnion , rogue states , intelligence
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives