Abstract

From time to time, the press reports the disruption of a terrorist plot by means of government agents infiltrating a terrorist network. Terrorists believe they are dealing with co-conspirators, only to find they have been dealing with government agents. The problem facing the terrorists is an asymmetric information problem that introduces quality uncertainty into the network of terrorist interactions—terrorists cannot be sure that their affiliates or co-conspirators are of high quality or low quality (that is, not co-conspirators at all but government agents). The economic theory of asymmetric information can be used to analyze the limits of the effectiveness of the injection of government agents into terrorist networks. Terrorist network infiltration is likely one of the most effective anti-terrorism security operations. Not only can network infiltration generate the results that capture the attention of the popular press but it can also destroy terrorist networks into which no government agents have actually been injected. Governments and their security agencies are advised to consider the resources allocated toward this type of anti-terrorism security operation.

Full Text
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