Abstract Covert action has long been a controversial tool of international relations. However, there is remarkably little public understanding about whether it works and, more fundamentally, about what constitutes success in this shadowy arena of state activity. This article distills competing criteria of success and examines how covert actions become perceived as successes. We develop a conceptual model of covert action success as a social construct and illustrate it through the case of ‘the golden age of CIA operations’. The socially constructed nature of success has important implications not just for evaluating covert actions but also for using, and defending against, them.
What constitutes successful covert action? Evaluating unacknowledged interventionism in foreign affairs
Rory Cormac,C. Walton,Damien Van Puyvelde
Published 2021 in Review of International Studies
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- Publication year
2021
- Venue
Review of International Studies
- Publication date
2021-05-24
- Fields of study
Political Science
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