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Democratization of Intelligence? Comparing Vietnam and Ukraine

Almroth, Björn Erik LU (2023) UNDK02 20222
Department of Political Science
Abstract
This study explores how a contemporary systemic shift regarding secrecy and intelligence is affecting the strategic performance of states engaged in overt or covert intervention. These changes are conceptualized by researchers as “implausible deniability”, “delayed disclosure” and “the democratization of intelligence” and their significance are applied to limited-war theory with a theoretical focus on acknowledgment and open secrets. Comparative case study methodology and narrative analysis are used to find and explore this change. Arguing that if it has taken place, it should be found, and explored in a contemporary case where these theoretical factors exist. This case is compared to a historical case, predating the change but which... (More)
This study explores how a contemporary systemic shift regarding secrecy and intelligence is affecting the strategic performance of states engaged in overt or covert intervention. These changes are conceptualized by researchers as “implausible deniability”, “delayed disclosure” and “the democratization of intelligence” and their significance are applied to limited-war theory with a theoretical focus on acknowledgment and open secrets. Comparative case study methodology and narrative analysis are used to find and explore this change. Arguing that if it has taken place, it should be found, and explored in a contemporary case where these theoretical factors exist. This case is compared to a historical case, predating the change but which contains similar dynamics, as a reference and point of comparison. Reporting and deliberations on Soviet surface-to-air missile support to North Vietnam during Operation Rolling Thunder are compared to a contemporary case when the Moskva was sunk during the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year. Due to this systemic shift secrecy is being replaced by ambiguity and non-acknowledgment. Mobilizing support for interventions in the future will probably require just cause, and harnessing secrecy as a source of state power might be increasingly difficult. (Less)
Popular Abstract
This study explores how a contemporary systemic shift regarding secrecy and intelligence is affecting the strategic performance of states engaged in overt or covert intervention. These changes are conceptualized by researchers as “implausible deniability”, “delayed disclosure” and “the democratization of intelligence” and their significance are applied to limited-war theory with a theoretical focus on acknowledgment and open secrets. Comparative case study methodology and narrative analysis are used to find and explore this change. Arguing that if it has taken place, it should be found, and explored in a contemporary case where these theoretical factors exist. This case is compared to a historical case, predating the change but which... (More)
This study explores how a contemporary systemic shift regarding secrecy and intelligence is affecting the strategic performance of states engaged in overt or covert intervention. These changes are conceptualized by researchers as “implausible deniability”, “delayed disclosure” and “the democratization of intelligence” and their significance are applied to limited-war theory with a theoretical focus on acknowledgment and open secrets. Comparative case study methodology and narrative analysis are used to find and explore this change. Arguing that if it has taken place, it should be found, and explored in a contemporary case where these theoretical factors exist. This case is compared to a historical case, predating the change but which contains similar dynamics, as a reference and point of comparison. Reporting and deliberations on Soviet surface-to-air missile support to North Vietnam during Operation Rolling Thunder are compared to a contemporary case when the Moskva was sunk during the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year. Due to this systemic shift secrecy is being replaced by ambiguity and non-acknowledgment. Mobilizing support for interventions in the future will probably require just cause, and harnessing secrecy as a source of state power might be increasingly difficult. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Almroth, Björn Erik LU
supervisor
organization
course
UNDK02 20222
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Covert intervention, Vietnam War, Russia-Ukraine War, implausible deniability, democratization of intelligence
language
English
id
9112758
date added to LUP
2023-05-12 11:37:48
date last changed
2023-05-12 11:37:48
@misc{9112758,
  abstract     = {{This study explores how a contemporary systemic shift regarding secrecy and intelligence is affecting the strategic performance of states engaged in overt or covert intervention. These changes are conceptualized by researchers as “implausible deniability”, “delayed disclosure” and “the democratization of intelligence” and their significance are applied to limited-war theory with a theoretical focus on acknowledgment and open secrets. Comparative case study methodology and narrative analysis are used to find and explore this change. Arguing that if it has taken place, it should be found, and explored in a contemporary case where these theoretical factors exist. This case is compared to a historical case, predating the change but which contains similar dynamics, as a reference and point of comparison. Reporting and deliberations on Soviet surface-to-air missile support to North Vietnam during Operation Rolling Thunder are compared to a contemporary case when the Moskva was sunk during the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year. Due to this systemic shift secrecy is being replaced by ambiguity and non-acknowledgment. Mobilizing support for interventions in the future will probably require just cause, and harnessing secrecy as a source of state power might be increasingly difficult.}},
  author       = {{Almroth, Björn Erik}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Democratization of Intelligence? Comparing Vietnam and Ukraine}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}