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GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead Boyd Sutton

GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

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GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead. Boyd Sutton. Outline. A Look Back What we were asked to do and how we did it What we found What we recommended What happened Some Thoughts for the Future Recommendations Pitfalls. What We Were Asked to Do. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

GLOBAL COVERAGELooking Back – Looking Ahead

Boyd Sutton

Page 2: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Outline

• A Look Back– What we were asked to do and how we did it– What we found– What we recommended– What happened

• Some Thoughts for the Future– Recommendations– Pitfalls

Page 3: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

What We Were Asked to Do

• Define “Global Coverage” and related terms• Define a process for accomplishing “adequate”

Global Coverage• Table options for:

– Alternative strategies– Collection and analysis objectives– What “baseline” knowledge we need to maintain– Approach to “surge”– Measuring progress and performance

Page 4: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Cartoon

• Robert’s scanner broke

• Caption is:– “Remember when we had just one big

problem?– Today we see hundreds of destabilizing

situations in what we can now call– THE NEW WORLD DISORDER

Page 5: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

How We Went About It

• Interviewed more than 70 people– Senior policy and military customers

• NSC, State, Defense, Treasury, USTR• JCS, Commands

• Senior intelligence managers and workers– Production agencies– Collectors and reporters

• Reviewed lots of documentation

Page 6: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Customers’ Needs

• Fairly simple: can be listed on one page

• Vast majority can be substantially met with open sources of information– But this demands precision collection, expert

knowledge, and processing

Page 7: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Basic Requirements

• Political—who is in, who is out• Economic• Diplomatic• Military• Societal• Infrastructure• Geospatial• US Interests

Page 8: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Selected Key Findings

• Consensus in GC’s importance– But few at lower levels aware of DCI’s strong

support• Poor communication from DCI downwards

• Customer believed appropriate balance of effort should be 70/30– Intelligence managers believed it should be

90/10• Poor communications with customers

Page 9: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Selected Key Findings

• Broad consensus among customers regarding needs– But none among intelligence managers

• Poor communication• Turf issues

• Divergent views of what intelligence program resources should be included– Strong military position that all “their”

resources “off limits”• Turf trumps common interest

Page 10: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Selected Key Findings

• Widespread concern regarding open sources– How viewed by senior managers– How used by analysts– Current and projected resources

• Need to look seriously at “commercial industry of open source providers”

• Acquire processed “knowledge” not just information

Page 11: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Framework

• Effective program requires clear, universal understanding on three key points:– Strategic intent: what do you want to achieve?– Definition of “global coverage” – what should

it mean to everyone?– Community framework: overall concept

Page 12: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Strategic Intent

• Three options:– Global Intelligence

• “Full service” but on a limited scale• Enough coverage so there are few surprises

– Focused Attention• Avoid defined categories of “major” surprises.

Accept others, respond well

– Quick Reaction• Accept many surprises, and focus on efficient

response.

Page 13: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Definition

• What is “Global Coverage?” Two options.– UNIVERSAL meaning of GC:

• General information for all countries, everything that is not a hard target issue

– RESTRICTED meaning of GC:• Intelligence for a defined set of countries

– Which countries?– What substance?

Page 14: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Framework

• What are the pillars of Global Coverage? ONE OPTION. No other came close.– Minimum baseline

• Knowledge, expertise, resources routinely applied

– Watch• Focus of routine attention to meet warning objectives

– Surge• Focused increase in resources to address a developing

situation

– Routine Services• Servicing customers’ routine (non-crisis) needs

Page 15: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Conclusions/Recommendations

• If everything is a priority, nothing is….– First, decide on strategic intent– Second, focus on what is essential

• Requirements versus “desirements”• Difficult but explicit decisions about which risks are

acceptable and which are not

• Develop a common language– Consistent definitions—common

understanding

Page 16: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

Conclusions/Recommendations

• Establish a common framework—the pillars– Minimum baseline—what to “know” all the time– Watch—what to watch all the time– Surge—how to get better fast, when needed– Routine services—juggling customers’ non-crisis

needs

• MAKE EXPLICIT CHOICES ABOUT HOW YOU ARE GOING TO HANDLE EACH

• If you cannot measure it, you cannot manage it.– Regular program of evaluation

• “Trust but verify”—the Achilles’ heel of management

Page 17: GLOBAL COVERAGE Looking Back – Looking Ahead

What Happened?

• NOTHING!

• DCI said “thanks” and shelved the study

• Only “decision” was to decide nothing

• Several senior managers praised report

• Only copies disseminated were those I circulated for comment.