Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on A Comparative Analysis on the Role of Intelligence in the Cuban Missile Crisis and the North Korean Invasion of South Korea. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper which compares and contrasts how intelligence played a significant role in each outcome, specifically discussing intelligence successes and failures, how intelligence was used to support policy, and how deficiencies in US intelligence capabilities impacted on the crisis. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGcmcintel.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
world was moving ever closer to nuclear war. President John F. Kennedy had received shocking intelligence information that revealed that the Soviet Union was stockpiling defensive missiles in Cuba,
which is located only ninety miles from the Florida coast. During the next thirteen days, intelligence data was compiled and aerial photographs were snapped and analyzed, as what amounted
to an elaborate strategic chess game with human stakes played out while the world held its collective breath. This was the dramatic climax of a Cold War that had
commenced shortly after World War II, which pitted wartime allies against each other in a conflict of competing political ideologies. The United States and the Soviet Union developed perceptions
of each other based on information received by covert intelligence agencies and overseas operatives. For the U.S., the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) coordinated these operations, and the reliability of
this data was critical to protect all citizens from unnecessary bloodshed. This was, after all, the nuclear age, and one misfire could obliterate the earth and everything in it
with the simple flip of a switch. Unfortunately, as JFK discovered in the early months of his presidency, the CIA was not the most dependable of organizations in terms
of information accuracy and assessing the worlds trouble spots. For example, in recent years, the CIA had failed miserably not only to predict the invasion of South Korea by
the North Koreans or the subsequent Chinese involvement, and it had consistently underestimated the Soviet desire to maintain pace with the U.S. in an arms race that had been escalating
since the conclusion of World War II, no matter what the cost. During this tumultuous time in world history, intelligence played a dominant role, and its successes and failures
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