Scarecrow Press
Pages: 120
Trim: 7⅛ x 10⅛
978-0-8108-5017-0 • Paperback /CD-ROM • October 2004 • $76.00 • (£58.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Sundri K. Khalsa has served as a military intelligence officer in the United States Air Force since 1996. She created the initial version of this forecasting methodology while serving in a leadership role in a counterintelligence/counter terrorism analysis cell in Saudi Arabia and further developed and refined this approach while at the Joint Military Intelligence College. Graduating first in her class, she was awarded the National Military Intelligence Association Award at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Joint Military Intelligence College.
Part 1 List of Figures
Part 2 List of Tables
Part 3 Preface
Part 4 Acknowledgments
Part 5 Introduction
Chapter 6 How to Forecast Terrorism: Step-By-Step Explanation of the Methodology
Chapter 7 The Acid Test: Evaluation of the Methodology against the 42 Common Warning Pitfalls
Chapter 8 How to Make it Happen: Recommendations for Implementation
Part 9 Bibliography
Part 10 Index
Part 11 About the Author
For those interested in learning more about the intelligence-warning process, especially regarding terrorism, this book will be of particular interest....If her system is implemented, Khalsa predicts that her methodology will guard against up to 82 percent of the known common warning pitfalls, an impressive increase over the traditionally accepted 30-percent warning-accuracy rate....the United States will be in good hands as long as we have innovative thinkers like Sundri Khalsa.
— Defense Intelligence Journal
Captain Kalsa has developed an interesting approach to forecasting acts of terror...
— Studies In Intelligence
[Khalsa] argues convincingly that her approach will enhance analytical ability through automation and standardization of warning indicators...[her] efforts are reflective of the type of transformational thinking the defense department needs for immediate and long-term assessment of the terrorist threat...I predict that the US will be in good hands as long as we have innovative thinkers like Sundri Khalsa.
— Lt Col Tony R. Mullis, USAF, Academic Instructor and Advisor, Air Command and Staff College