Intelligence Success and Failure The Human Factor

Intelligence Success and Failure: The Human Factor by Uri Bar-Joseph, published by Oxford University Press in 2017, offers a comprehensive examination of strategic surprise in military history. This 262-page book delves into the complexities surrounding intelligence failures and successes, challenging the prevailing notion that catastrophic surprises are solely the result of warning failures. Bar-Joseph and co-author Rose McDermott present a psychological perspective, exploring how individual psychopathologies influence decision-making in critical historical contexts.
Readers will find an analysis of six significant military events, including the German invasion of the USSR and the Yom Kippur War, which serve as case studies for understanding the dynamics of intelligence and strategic response. The authors investigate the psychological mechanisms that lead leaders to misinterpret intelligence and make critical errors, as well as the learning processes that can facilitate future successes. By focusing on both failures and successes, this book contributes to the discourse on military strategy, national security, and the psychological factors that shape intelligence assessments.
Official synopsis Publisher
The study of strategic surprise has long concentrated on important failures that resulted in catastrophes such as Pearl Harbor and the September 11th attacks, and the majority of previously published research in the field determines that such large-scale military failures often stem from defective information-processing systems.
Intelligence Success and Failure challenges this common assertion that catastrophic surprise attacks are the unmistakable products of warning failure alone. Further, Uri Bar-Joseph and Rose McDermott approach this topic uniquely by highlighting the successful cases of strategic surprise, as well as the failures, from a psychological perspective. This book delineates the critical role of individual psychopathologies in precipitating failure by investigating important historical cases.
Bar-Joseph and McDermott use six particular military attacks as examples for their analysis, including: “Barbarossa,” the June 1941 German invasion of the USSR (failure); the fall-winter 1941 battle for Moscow (success); the Arab attack on Israel on Yom Kippur 1973 (failure); and the second Egyptian offensive in the war six days later (success). From these specific cases and others, they analyze the psychological mechanisms through which leaders assess their own fatal mistakes and use the intelligence available to them. Their research examines the factors that contribute to failure and success in responding to strategic surprise and identify the learning process that central decision makers use to facilitate subsequent successes.
Intelligence Success and Failure presents a new theory in the study of strategic surprise that claims the key explanation for warning failure is not unintentional action, but rather, motivated biases in key intelligence and central leaders that null any sense of doubt prior to surprise attacks.
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