Human intelligence is not dead in the age of ubiquitous technical surveillance (UTS), but its center of gravity is shifting. In a world where phones, cars, and cities are sensors, HUMINT has to adapt around three pressure points: • Sources are selected and developed in the shadow of pattern-of-life analytics, with elite targets either hyper-observable or deliberately off-grid. • Covers now live or die by their digital exhaust: if your pattern looks wrong to an algorithm, your legend is already burned. • Meets move from heroic “Moscow rules” streetcraft to operations that ride on, or even weaponize, the surveillance layer itself.
This post extends the Security Nexus Deep Dive episode “HUMINT Adapts to Total Telemetry” and pulls the scholarly thread tighter around UTS, cyber-enabled tradecraft, and the legal/policy environment that quietly makes all of this possible. Read More…