AbstractThis article presents a modified two‐state solution to the Israeli‐Palestinian conflict. A "2 + 1 solution" would see the establishment of a State of Palestine in the West Bank whose constitution proscribes the participation in government of any party whose platform calls for the elimination of Israel; Gaza would accede upon the reform or demise of Hamas. Achieving a state in the West Bank should be the proximate, urgent goal of the Palestinian people. Ideologically motivated Israeli settlement of the West Bank continues apace and threatens the viability of a two‐state solution. Meanwhile, religiously motivated policies of colonization hide behind a security narrative conflating Hamas with Fatah and suggesting that the Palestinians pose an existential threat. The 2 + 1 solution, by excluding Hamas from a State of Palestine, directly addresses Israel's legitimate security concerns and thus carries the potential to lay bare the extent to which ideology informs Israeli policy. The approach also gives moderate Palestinians the opportunity to define the civic values and attributes of Palestinian national identity in a way that supports a lasting two‐state peace.
Introduction -- Intelligence history -- Intelligence and security institutions: organizations and processes -- Comparative intelligence systems -- Intelligence operations -- Counterintelligence -- Covert operations -- Cyberspace operations and the information environment -- Intelligence regulation and governance -- Inter-agency communications -- Intelligence analysis -- Analytic methods -- The ethics of intelligence -- Threats to the United States and its interests.