Thinking Methods of Intelligence Analysis
In order to improve the quality of intelligence analysis, the US intelligence community places great emphasis on the use of analytical thinking methods in intelligence analysis. Analytical thinking is characterized by slow, deliberate, conscious reasoning. When intelligence analysts are confronted with incomplete, ambiguous, and sometimes deceptive information, analytical thinking is needed to resolve these challenges.
1. Critical Thinking
As far as the U.S. intelligence
community is concerned, in the past intelligence work, many cases of major mistakes
originated from the analysis and judgment of experts. Using critical thinking can
avoid analytical errors that come with fixed thinking. Critical thinking requires
expert analytical examination of all evidence for and against a proposition, and
critical consideration of clear and unclear interpretations. Independent thinking is
the key quality of intelligence analysts, using critical thinking and not blindly
following authority is an important value of intelligence work.
Critical
thinking helps intelligence analysts decide what is the best approach to a
particular intelligence problem by asking thinkers to ask broader questions and
questions while working to find answers to those questions. Critical thinking in the
intelligence analysis process is mainly used to examine key assumptions, strive to
find evidence of opposing views, and take multiple perspectives seriously for as
long as possible.
2. Structural Analysis
Among
analytical thinking methods, structured analysis is a rising star and belongs to
systematic thinking methods. Structured analysis provides a step-by-step process.
The principle of structured analysis is to concretize and externalize the analyst's
internal thought process in a systematic way, making it more observable so that this
process can be shared, critiqued, and improved. The main difference between the
structured analysis method and other methods in intelligence analysis is that it
reduces the human subjectivity in the analysis and increases the logical rigor and
method transparency.
The structured analysis method decomposes the specific
problem that needs to be analyzed into several parts, and refines it to form a
step-by-step process to deal with the problem, which helps analysts organize a large
amount of scattered data. This approach makes the analyst's mind more open and more
receptive to self-criticism and criticism from others.
Of course, there is
no one-size-fits-all approach, but using a structured approach can reduce the
frequency and severity of errors. A structured approach helps analysts think more
rigorously about the issues to be analyzed, prevent preconceived ideas, conduct
prudent and rigorous evidence review, and ensure that analytical conclusions are
confirmed and validated.