Abstract
ABSTRACTThis paper examines the use of military intelligence in aid of the civil power in England and Wales. The use of military intelligence domestically in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is a significant part of British intelligence history, although it has not received the attention that British military intelligence abroad in defence of the Empire or in conventional wars has. An examination of the domestic role of military intelligence also highlights the extent to which commanders were developing some of the principles of military intelligence before any formal doctrine was devised.
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