
Description
In Spy Watching, Loch K. Johnson explores the United States' travails in its efforts to maintain effective accountability over its spy services. Johnson explores the work of the famous Church Committee, a Senate panel that investigated America's espionage organizations in 1975 and established new protocol for supervising the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the nation's other sixteen secret services. Johnson explores why partisanship has crept into once-neutral intelligence operations, the effect of the 9/11 attacks on the expansion of spying, and the controversies related to CIA rendition and torture programs. He also discusses both the Edward Snowden case and the ongoing investigations into the Russian hack of the 2016 US election. Above all, Spy Watching seeks to find a sensible balance between the twin imperatives in a democracy of liberty and security. Johnson draws on scores of interviews with Directors of Central Intelligence and others in America's secret agencies, making this a uniquely authoritative account.
Product Details
Publisher | Oxford Univ PR |
Publish Date | January 02, 2018 |
Pages | 632 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780190682712 |
Dimensions | 9.3 X 6.4 X 2.0 inches | 2.3 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"In this insightful examination of America's struggle to balance liberty and security, Johnson... writes from personal experience and extensive scholarship, so readers will encounter a great deal of information, much of it unsettling... [A] thoughtful, not terribly optimistic analysis of the perpetual tension between secret services and liberal democracy."--Kirkus
"This is a learned, mighty and magisterial book."--Professional Security Magazine"With his experience as a congressional staffer involved in the investigation of abuses by the intelligence community and a distinguished career as a scholar of intelligence issues, Johnson brings a wealth of knowledge to this ambitious project... Spy Watching will surely come to be seen as an essential part of the literature on intelligence administration in the US."--CHOICE Reviews
". . . . a superb, beautifully written book, teeming with eminently quotable passages and erudition . . . Johnson calls for greater public understanding of the value of intelligence accountability, a laudable ambition that academics can play a part on helping to achieve. His book is a first step in the right direction . . . . Spy Watching is history writing of the first rank that demands time to mine its treasures and to absorb fully the important issues it raises."--Christopher R. Moran, Intelligence and National Security"Spy Watching is an impressive, even encyclopedic, review of America's experience regulating its large, powerful, and compulsively secretive intelligence agencies... Johnson is eminently qualified to undertake this study-a highly-regarded professor, author, journal editor, and icon in the small but growing academic discipline of intelligence studies... Spy Watching is a valuable history and comprehensive study of America's ongoing experiment with democratic oversight of its essential, but imperfect, intelligence enterprise."--Lawfare Blog
"[A] deeply informed study of political oversight of US intelligence services... [Spy Watching] deserves close attention, because of the personal experience that underpins [Johnson's] judgments, together with their evenhandedness and common sense. He considers the past only to address the future: How can intelligence services that have been granted unprecedented powers since President George W. Bush launched his ill-named War on Terror be subjected to democratic scrutiny? How can the loss of public trust be restored? How can citizens be taught to recognize that the US, like all nations, possesses secrets that must be preserved for the common good; that absolute openness on the part of government and its institutions is the enemy of national security?"
--Max Hastings, New York Review of Books
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