AIC INTELLIGENCE TRAINING CENTER
Angelo Intelligence Center  ·  Established by Congressional Mandate

Strengthening the Craft.
Restoring Confidence.

In the wake of an intelligence failure, Congress mandated in-house training across the AIC. This site is that training — built for producers and consumers alike, grounded in unclassified scholarship, and designed to ensure that what went wrong is understood well enough that it is never repeated.

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The Mandate

Why This Training Exists

Intelligence failures are not simply analytical mistakes. They are systemic breakdowns — failures of collection, failures of analysis, failures of communication, and sometimes failures in the fundamental relationship between the intelligence community and the officials it serves.1

Congress placed a funding mark against next year's AIC budget in direct response to a breakdown in our analytical processes and organizational practices. This site fulfills that requirement. More importantly, it is a resource built to make every AIC professional better at their job.

The history of American intelligence is in part a history of painful lessons — Pearl Harbor, the Korean War, the events of September 11, 2001, the flawed assessments that preceded the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Each of these moments represents a failure of the intelligence enterprise to deliver what decision-makers needed.2 The AIC is not immune to these dynamics.

Understanding how and why failures happen is the first step toward building an organization that is genuinely resistant to them. That is what this training is for.

18
IC Member Agencies
5
Phases of the Intelligence Cycle
6+
Cognitive Biases Examined
3
Major Failure Case Studies

"The purpose of intelligence is to reduce the uncertainty of decision-makers — to give officials who operate in a world of incomplete information the best possible basis for consequential choices."

Navigation Guide

How to Use This Site

This site is organized into four core training modules. Each module is self-contained but builds on the others — we recommend moving through them in order if you are new to the material. Use the navigation bar at the top of every page to move between modules.

Module What It Covers Best For
The Intelligence Community IC structure, key agencies, producers vs. consumers, the ODNI All AIC personnel
The Intelligence Cycle Planning, collection, processing, analysis, dissemination — and failure points Primarily producers
Analytic Tradecraft Structured techniques, cognitive biases, writing for the consumer Primarily analysts
Intelligence Failures Causes, case studies (Pearl Harbor · 9/11 · Iraq WMD), lessons learned All AIC personnel

Each page includes footnotes citing all source material. A complete bibliography formatted in accordance with CMOS 17th edition is available on the final page.

Training Modules

Begin Your Training

Select any module below to begin. Each is written for both intelligence producers and consumers, with material drawn from leading unclassified scholarship on intelligence theory, practice, and history.

Footnotes
  1. Johnson, National Security Intelligence, 14.
  2. Johnson, National Security Intelligence, 23–25.