Intelligence and National Security

President George W. Bush meets with members of his national security team Thursday, March 31, 2005, at the White House to discuss the findings of the Commission on the Intelligence Capablities of the United States regarding Weapons of Mass Destructi…

President George W. Bush meets with members of his national security team Thursday, March 31, 2005, at the White House to discuss the findings of the Commission on the Intelligence Capablities of the United States regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction. The 13-chapter report to the President was released Thursday. White House photo by Eric Draper

 

Roberts, Patrick S. In Press. “Homeland Security Law and Policy,” in National Security Law and Policy: A Reader. Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Roberts, Patrick S. and Robert P. Saldin. 2017. “Why Presidents Sometimes Do Not Use Intelligence Information.” Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 131, Issue 4, (Winter): 779-802. 

Roberts, Patrick S. and Robert Saldin. 2017. “Why Presidents Ignore Intelligence Information,” Presidential Power Blog. March 16.

Roberts, Patrick S. and Robert Saldin. 2017. “Trump and the Intelligence Community: The Costs of Ignoring Intelligence.” The American Interest. January 31. 

Roberts, Patrick S. and Robert Saldin. 2015. “Ignoring the Not-So-Obvious in Obama’s Negotiations with Iran,”The Hill, July 16, 2015. 

Roberts, Patrick S. 2014. “How Well Will the International Atomic Energy Agency Be Able To Safeguard More Nuclear Materials in More States?” in Moving Beyond Pretense: Nuclear Power and Nonproliferation, Henry Sokolski, ed.(Carlisle, PA: Strategic Studies Institute Publications Office, United States Army War College): 265-302.

Roberts, Patrick S. 2009. “How Security Agencies Control Change: Executive Power and the Quest for Autonomy in the FBI and CIA,” Public Organization Review, Vol. 9, No. 2 (June): 169-198.