Following a recent article, political revisionists are again arguing 'Bush was right on WMD.' Chris Miller recounts the history of how America went to war in Iraq and why President Bush is still wrong.
Chris Miller explores the U.S. Intelligence-Policymaker relationship and explains why their different approaches and interests cause 'friction' which affects American national security policy.
Chris Miller argues Vladimir Putin is following Khrushchev's "surface tension" strategy in Ukraine, bringing Washington and Moscow "eyeball to eyeball" again. But so far, the West is doing the blinking.
CIA spymaster Jack Devine sets the record straight about the agency's controversial role during the Cold War in his new memoir, Good Hunting.
Joshua Rovner of Southern Methodist University talks about his book, Fixing the Facts, on the intelligence-policy relationship and "politicization" of intelligence during the Iraq War and throughout U.S. history.
As the world finds itself concerned with Russian missiles once again, Chris Miller revisits SNIE 85-3-62, the crucial--and wrong--U.S. intelligence estimate that Nikita Khrushchev would not place nuclear missiles on Cuba.
Chris Miller on the latest German-American spying scandal and why Berlin and Moscow considering going back to paper shuffling and typewriters to counter electronic intelligence gathering may not be as crazy as it sounds.
Following Edward Snowden's NSA disclosures and renewed clashes between Washington and Berlin over espionage, Chris Miller discusses Cold War lessons in counterintelligence still applicable to national security challenges today.









