"Two decades into the 21st century, after more than a century of dangerously uneven performance that contributed to national devastation and often uncomfortable subordination to their powerful U.S. ally, Japanese leaders have begun to reinvent their nation's flawed intelligence community"--
This book was pretty difficult for me to read, mostly because the history of Japan I am not familiar with, anyway through the development of its secret services, now I have learned a lot but I would not recommend this book to many people.
Questo é stato un libro particolarmente difficile da leggere, soprattutto perché in generale, e anche nel particolare, la storia del Giappone mi é abbastanza ignota. Comunque, attraverso questo excursus che racconta lo sviluppo dei servizi segreti, ne ho imparata un pochino, ciò non toglie che non consiglierei questo libro a molti.
** Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with the digital copy of this book in exchange for my honest review ** Muy interesante. En este libro el autor repasa la historia de la inteligencia japonesa, que ya desde la premisa, me resultaba sumamente interesante. Esperaba que el libro fuera interesante, pero no tenia una expectativa definida, pero la verdad es que el análisis que el autor realiza en esta obra es muy incisivo y completo.
As a narrative of the slow march to bureaucracy reform after 1945, this isn't a particularly thrilling topic and unfortunately Samuels does not seem to manage to resolve that.
However, it is certainly a very readable and clear explanation of the topic with strong backing theoretical framework. More diagrams would have helped.
The post-war history of the Japanese Intelligence Community is like the post-war history of Midway Island: not a lot happened.
Rival intelligence agencies that don't want to work together. Low capacity in everything but signals intelligence. Periodic attempts to boost capacity which end up not achieving much because of opposition from the public and the aforementioned problem with turf wars between the rival Japanese intelligence agencies. The book ends with a new attempt to boost capabilities and the author indicates that this time the attempt will succeed. Maybe things will change, but will they change enough to make a difference? It's a (famously) tricky business. The will may now be there, but it'll take more than that.
It's not the author's fault that nothing happened, he can only cover the material that's there, but a less-than-satisfactory reading experience is what it is whether the author is to blame or not.
This book is a masterpiece that incisively analyzes the Japanese intelligence community and its activities. I learned a lot from this book. I think that Japan wants to overcome the various problems facing its intelligence and become a part of the Five Eyes as soon as possible.
Satoshi Morimoto, Former Minister of Defense, Japan
---
With deep mastery of Japanese and American archival material and a raft of interviews with key players, Professor Samuels has captured in a single, valuable volume the successes and failures of Japanese intelligence since 1895 and, above all, the political cross-currents and unique restraints under which its agencies have operated since 1945.
Joel Brenner, former head of US counterintelligence, Office of the Director of National Intelligence and former Inspector General of the National Security Agency
Excellent review of the history of Japan’s intelligence community
Wonderfully researched and analyzed. Valuable insights for any scholar of Japan’s security apparatus, especially in light of recent developments in the expansion of Japan’s defense budget and role in its alliance with the United States.
The history is adequate and badly needed as part of the intelligence studies canon; the unnecessary reinvention of a heuristic for interrogating intelligence history shows that Samuels is not an academic, and hasn’t bothered to explore whether a methodology already exists (it does). This digression wastes a lot of the beginning of this book and makes it read like a republished PhD manuscript.
A fantastic overview of the Japanese intelligence community. But even more so the first chapter is an education about the intelligence community. As an analyst, it even provided some useful information on how to be a better analyst. Overall, one of the better, more informative books I've read.
A good primer on the history of Japanese intelligence. Parts of the prose were dry, repetitive or choppy, but Samuels is a wonderful guide to all things Japan.