Today, more than ever, the use of denial and deception (D&D) is being used to compensate for an opponent's military superiority, to obtain or develop weapons of mass destruction, and to violate international agreements and sanctions. Although the historical literature on the use of strategic deception is widely available, technical coverage of the subject is scattered in hard-to-find and out-of-print sources. This is the first technical volume to offer you a current, comprehensive and systematic overview of the concepts and methods that underlie strategic deception and, more importantly, to provide you with an in-depth understanding of counterdeception. Moreover, this timely book offers you an excellent framework for the development of architectures and systems for deception detection and other countermeasures. You gain an in-depth understanding of the scope and complex nature of the D&D problem, and learn how to plan and organize research and development, system development, and operational activities focused on counterdeception. Further, the book suggests specific technical and organizational approaches to help you detect and defeat the D&D plans and operations of real and potential adversaries
Michael Bennett works as a consultant in northern Virginia. He has experience in both the government and private sectors as a principle investigator and project manager in a variety of intelligence-related disciplines including research and development, technical operations, and analysis. The focus of his expertise over the past 20 years has been in developing and applying advanced technologies to the most difficult problems of intelligence collection and analysis. Mr. Bennett has conceived and managed projects in the areas of product and image security, steganography, imaging sensors, signal processing, communications receivers, direction finding, and advanced technical collection systems. He holds a B.S.E.E. from Purdue University and an M.B.A from the University of Connecticut.
Ed Waltz is the Chief Scientist, Intelligence Innovation Division of BAE Systems Advanced Information Technologies, where he leads intelligence analysis and information operations research for the Intelligence Community and the Department of Defense. For the past decade, his research has focused on modeling human systems, including foreign leadership, organizations and social populations. He is also the author of Knowledge Management in the Intelligence Enterprise and Information Warfare: Principles and Operations, and the co-author of Multisensor Data Fusion. He holds a B.S.E.E. from the Case Institute of Technology and an M.S. in computer, information and control engineering from the University of Michigan.