On #Espionage and #Intelligence Gathering | On The Record cfrontherecord.podbean.com/e…
Summary by #GeminiThis podcast episode, titled “New Frontiers in Intelligence: The Changing Nature of Espionage,” is a recording of a Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) event. It features a discussion on how technology and shifting global threats are fundamentally altering the intelligence landscape.
Host: Barton Gellman (Brennan Center for Justice)
Guests:
Anthony Vinci: Author of The Fourth Intelligence Revolution, former CTO of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).
Rebecca U. Weiner: Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence and Counterterrorism, NYPD.
Robert Cardillo: Former Director of the NGA.Key Themes and Discussions:
1. The Fourth Intelligence Revolution
Anthony Vinci outlined a historical framework for intelligence, arguing we are currently entering a “Fourth Revolution”:
Revolution 1 (WWII): The “Big Bang” of modern US intelligence with the creation of the OSS.
Revolution 2 (Cold War): Professionalization and the creation of agencies like the CIA and NSA. This era was defined by secrecy and compartmentalization.
Revolution 3 (Post-9/11): A shift to a “whole-of-government” approach (creation of the ODNI) because Cold War compartmentalization created cracks that allowed terrorists to slip through.
Revolution 4 (Current): Driven by AI and the threat of China. This era requires integrating vast amounts of data and adapting to machines as primary processors of intelligence.2. The Radical Shift in Threats
Rebecca Weiner discussed how the threat landscape has evolved rapidly, forcing local law enforcement (like the NYPD) to adopt an intelligence mindset:
Evolution of Targets: The focus has shifted from Al-Qaeda (2006) to lone actors (2010s) to a complex mix of ideologies today, including foreign terrorists, far-right/far-left extremists, and conspiracy theorists.
“Grievance-Fueled Violence”: Weiner noted a rise in violence driven by personal grievances amplified by online ecosystems. She cited the assassination of a health insurance CEO (referencing the Luigi Mangione case) as an example of how online rhetoric can accelerate real-world violence.
Minors as Actors: A disturbing trend of “nihilistic violent extremism” largely perpetrated by minors, often manifesting as school shootings or random acts of terror.3. From Secret Satellites to Open Source
Robert Cardillo explained the transformation of Geospatial Intelligence (GEOINT):
Old Model: A closed loop where Top Secret questions were answered by Top Secret satellites for a few cleared individuals.
New Reality: Commercial satellites and open-source data now provide massive visibility. The “advantage” no longer comes from having the only picture, but from the speed and integration of data.
“Out-America China”: Cardillo argued that the U.S. should not try to copy China’s state-controlled system (“out-China China”) but should instead leverage the innovation and risk-taking of the American private sector to maintain an edge.4. Emerging Risks & Challenges
Biological Threats: Vinci identified bio-threats (e.g., genetically engineered diseases) as the “scariest possible threat.” Detecting them is difficult because it requires monitoring personal health data, raising privacy concerns that the government cannot solve alone.
The Privacy Paradox: Weiner pointed out that while citizens are wary of government surveillance, they willingly give massive amounts of sensitive data to private companies (like TikTok), which constitutes a major national security vulnerability.
Politicization: The panel discussed the perennial fear of intelligence being politicized. Vinci noted this is not new (citing LBJ, JFK) but is more felt now because intelligence collection increasingly touches the lives of everyday Americans rather than just foreign military targets.— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Nov 28, 2025
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