Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present

Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. Presidential election, to British and U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring activities of their citizens. They seem new largely because, traditionally, intelligence agencies on both sides of the...

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Main Author: Calder Walton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SJSU Scholarworks 2018-09-01
Series:Secrecy and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/8/
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author Calder Walton
author_facet Calder Walton
author_sort Calder Walton
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description Many intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. Presidential election, to British and U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring activities of their citizens. They seem new largely because, traditionally, intelligence agencies on both sides of the Atlantic were excessively secretive about their past activities: even the names “GCHQ” and “NSA” were airbrushed from declassified records, and thus missing from major historical works and scholarship on on post-war international relations. The resulting secrecy about British and U.S. intelligence has led to misunderstandings and conspiracy theories in societies about them. Newly opened secret records now reveal the long history of many subjects seen in today’s news-cycle: Anglo-American intelligence cooperation, interference by countries in foreign elections, disnformation, and the use and abuse of intelligence by governments. Newly declassified records also add to our understanding of major chapters of international history, like Britain’s post-war end of empire. Without overcoming our historical amnesia disorder about U.S. and British intelligence, citizens, scholars and policy-makers cannot hope to understand the proper context for what secret agencies are doing today.
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spelling doaj.art-7c714288f7ac4aa7991b7cb5ceb537be2022-12-22T02:06:27ZengSJSU ScholarworksSecrecy and Society2377-61882018-09-0121Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and PresentCalder Walton0 Kennedy School of Government, Harvard UniversityMany intelligence scandals in the news today seem unprecedented - from Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. Presidential election, to British and U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring activities of their citizens. They seem new largely because, traditionally, intelligence agencies on both sides of the Atlantic were excessively secretive about their past activities: even the names “GCHQ” and “NSA” were airbrushed from declassified records, and thus missing from major historical works and scholarship on on post-war international relations. The resulting secrecy about British and U.S. intelligence has led to misunderstandings and conspiracy theories in societies about them. Newly opened secret records now reveal the long history of many subjects seen in today’s news-cycle: Anglo-American intelligence cooperation, interference by countries in foreign elections, disnformation, and the use and abuse of intelligence by governments. Newly declassified records also add to our understanding of major chapters of international history, like Britain’s post-war end of empire. Without overcoming our historical amnesia disorder about U.S. and British intelligence, citizens, scholars and policy-makers cannot hope to understand the proper context for what secret agencies are doing today.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/8/Britaindeclassificationespionageintelligenceinternational relationsresearch methodssecrecysecurity servicesU.S. Intelligence Communitywarfare
spellingShingle Calder Walton
Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
Secrecy and Society
Britain
declassification
espionage
intelligence
international relations
research methods
secrecy
security services
U.S. Intelligence Community
warfare
title Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
title_full Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
title_fullStr Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
title_full_unstemmed Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
title_short Historical Amnesia: British and U.S. Intelligence, Past and Present
title_sort historical amnesia british and u s intelligence past and present
topic Britain
declassification
espionage
intelligence
international relations
research methods
secrecy
security services
U.S. Intelligence Community
warfare
url https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/8/
work_keys_str_mv AT calderwalton historicalamnesiabritishandusintelligencepastandpresent