In this article for Foreign Affairs, Richard K. Betts, director of Columbia University's Institute of War and Peace Studies, argues that some of the reforms proposed in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks may make things worse. On the topic of human intelligence, he writes, "Human intelligence is key because the essence of the terrorist threat is the capacity to conspire." However, he warns, "Building up human intelligence networks worldwide is a long-term project. It inevitably spawns concern about waste (many such networks will never produce anything useful), deception, (human sources are widely distrusted), and complicity with murderous characters... These are prices that can be borne politically in the present atmosphere of crisis. If the sense of crisis abates, however, commitment to the long-term project could falter." [Foreign Affairs, January/February 2002]
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