twopandinner

twopandinner OP t1_ivtq2wg wrote

Today, it’s the National Intelligence University. In 1992, it was the Defense Intelligence College - it had its first name change in 1994 when it became JMIC, the Joint Military Intelligence College. Students can and do publish their papers there sometimes - it depends on what their research is and the kinds of papers they write. Their website has some fantastic reading, to include Cynthia Grabo’s book on indications and warning. And publish student thesii make their way out into the academic world the same as from other US military centers - US Naval Postgraduate, the War Colleges, etc. I’m just curious if anyone knows the subject of his research - maybe he referenced it somewhere, talked about it in an article that didn’t come back in the searches I did, made a casual reference in an interview or something.

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twopandinner OP t1_ivtlxa2 wrote

Yes - some of his other academic papers associated with his research later in his military career while he was a military historian, or serving as a professor for the Air Force, are often either listed or have been made available, as is the case with these. What I have not see listed or made available is the subject - or the paper itself, which would surprise me - of his research from his time spent at the Defense Intelligence College. It’s incorrectly listed on his Wikipedia page as the Joint Intelligence College.

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twopandinner OP t1_ivrxran wrote

That’s his dissertation at New Brunswick, from his research in support of his PhD. He was also awarded multiple masters levels degrees, one of which was from early in his career when he was still an intelligence officer. That school - now under the Office of the Director of National Intelligence - was at the time under the Defense Intelligence Agency. I haven’t seen a reference to his research at that time - which I suppose might have been different, given that he had not left Air Force intelligence to be tract into the historian / professor niche field yet.

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