Ethnic Minorities and the Moral Economy of U.S. Military Policy
policytensor.substack.com
Of all civilians writing on U.S. military and foreign policy, perhaps the most interesting are former intelligence officers. One of the sharpest knives in that drawer is Graham Fuller, a former station chief at Kabul until the Soviet takeover. Back at Langley from 1978, Fuller seems to have worked in estimative intelligence with responsibility for the Middle East, eventually serving on the National Intelligence Council. He left the agency in 1988 for Rand where he stayed until 2000. Since then he seems to have been writing free lance.
Ethnic Minorities and the Moral Economy of U.S. Military Policy
Ethnic Minorities and the Moral Economy of…
Ethnic Minorities and the Moral Economy of U.S. Military Policy
Of all civilians writing on U.S. military and foreign policy, perhaps the most interesting are former intelligence officers. One of the sharpest knives in that drawer is Graham Fuller, a former station chief at Kabul until the Soviet takeover. Back at Langley from 1978, Fuller seems to have worked in estimative intelligence with responsibility for the Middle East, eventually serving on the National Intelligence Council. He left the agency in 1988 for Rand where he stayed until 2000. Since then he seems to have been writing free lance.