Abstract

What is the real ethical framework of an intelligence analyst? We addressed this question by presenting a group of civil and military intelligence analysts (N = 41), and a control group of non-professionals (N = 41), with a set of dilemmas depicting intelligence agents facing the decision whether to violate a deontological rule where that would benefit their work (ethics-of-intelligence dilemmas). Participants judged how much violating the rule was acceptable. Next, we measured participants’ individual differences in social dominance orientation (using the Social Dominance Orientation scale which measures the proclivity to endorse intergroup hierarchy and anti-egalitarianism), their deontological and utilitarian response tendencies (using classical moral dilemmas), and how much they value rule conformity, traditions, and safety and stability in the society (using the Value Survey). A multiple regression analysis revealed that, among all the factors, only social dominance significantly helped explain variability in intelligence analysts’ but not non-professionals’ resolutions of the ethics-of-intelligence dilemmas. Specifically, social dominance positively predicted the tendency to judge violating the deontological rule acceptable, possibly suggesting that analysts who show a stronger proclivity to desire their country or company to prevail over others are also more lenient toward deontological violations if these result in a greater good for the state or the company. For the first time in the open literature, we elucidated some key aspects of the real ethics of intelligence.

Highlights

  • Societies, institutions, and political organizations constantly face threats to their own security

  • Let us imagine that a former intelligence professional deployed in Vietnam during the war is an academic hired in a university, and she is asked to prepare a course and publish a paper presenting the history of intelligence in Vietnam

  • Whereas responses in the control group were not significantly predicted by any of the variables included in the model, R2 = .14, F(7, 33) = 0.77, p = .619, intelligence analysts’ responses were predicted by Social Dominance Orientation (SDO) and Tradition scores

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Summary

Introduction

Institutions, and political organizations constantly face threats to their own security. With respect to the treatment of classified information and leaked documents, they sometimes can be students enrolled in university courses, professors and academic researchers (Gearon, 2020; Goldman, 2013, 2018; see Barna, 2014; Goodman & Omand, 2018) Within this scenario, it is possible to ask to what extent they should adhere to deontological principles rather than prioritize their duties as citizen-students or academics. Let us imagine an intelligence analyst working for a U.S agency who is unable to retrieve a relevant piece of information from the Intelligence Community This information is leaked and released in a neo-Wikileaks, and he can access it from his laptop at home. Should he use the leaked information, knowing that such a practice would not be allowed? In a way, here, as in other cases, we have a dilemma that can be solved either in favor of strictly respecting the deontological rules of the analyst profession or in favor of a more utilitarian reasoning that would lead to violate the deontological rule to eventually serve the state (disseminate truthful information or better protect from threats to national security)

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