Apply

Donate Request Information

  Donate Donate  

U.S. Intelligence in the Cold War and Beyond

IWP 632
Four credits

Secret intelligence is the "missing dimension" of Cold War history, as it is of most diplomatic history. This course analyzes a selective history of the U.S. intelligence community in the Cold War in order to assess its overall role. On the basis of declassified intelligence records and eyewitness accounts of former senior intelligence officers, the course focuses on what the intelligence community collected, knew, and estimated, and how intelligence reporting did or did not affect U.S. national security strategy and policy. The course concludes by examining U.S. intelligence in the post-Cold War period.

 

Semester Available


Summer Semester

Pre-requisites


  Intelligence and Policy

Principal Professor


   David L. Thomas
Department of Defense {read more}

FEATURED FACULTY

Barbara P. Billauer

President, Foundation for Law and Science Centers; IWP Research Professor of Scientific Statecraft

Genocide and Genocide Prevention

This seminar concentrates on Genocide and Genocide Prevention in the 20th and 21st centuries.  The objective is to conduct case studies of genocide, identify ideological and political reasons for those crimes, and detect early warning signs for genocide prevention.

Principal Professor

  Marek Jan Chodakiewicz

Copyright 2010 Institute of World Politics. All Rights Reserved eResources