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| Natura: | Recurso digital |
| Lingua: | inglese |
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Zenodo
2026
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| Accesso online: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18717001 |
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| _version_ | 1866902063075557376 |
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| author | Spiridonov, Andrey |
| author_facet | Spiridonov, Andrey |
| contents | <p>This preprint advances a formal reconstitution of counterintelligence analysis as a fundamental discipline adequate to contemporary adversarial environments. It argues that the traditional tradecraft paradigm—grounded in tacit integration, experiential compression, and hierarchical resolution—has reached structural saturation under conditions of reflexive adaptation, cross-domain embedding, and intentionally engineered informational distortion.</p> <p>The article introduces the concept of structural uncertainty: a persistent analytic condition in which partial observability is compounded by adversarial design, and where informational fields may be strategically shaped to influence institutional interpretation. Under such conditions, opacity of inference becomes not merely a methodological limitation but a systemic vulnerability.</p> <p>In response, the work establishes the foundations of Structural Counterintelligence Analysis. It defines the adversarial configuration as the formal unit of analysis and articulates core methodological components: explicit axiomatic commitments, reconstructable hypothesis architecture, probabilistic articulation and longitudinal calibration, bounded reflexive modeling, and institutionalized mechanisms of cumulative correction.</p> <p>The argument is disciplinary rather than rhetorical. It contends that counterintelligence analysis must externalize its inferential structure in order to remain proportionate to reflexive adversarial systems. The transition proposed is not the refinement of tradecraft but its subordination within a formally constituted analytic architecture.</p> <p>This text functions as a theoretical foundation for further methodological formalization and empirical application.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18717001 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | Counterintelligence Analysis as a Fundamental and Formal Science: The End of the Tradecraft Paradigm Spiridonov, Andrey Structural Counterintelligence Analysis counterintelligence theory tradecraft paradigm structural uncertainty adversarial reflexivity adversarial configuration probabilistic calibration epistemology of intelligence hybrid threats analytic formalization Social sciences Social science Politics International politics Political sciences <p>This preprint advances a formal reconstitution of counterintelligence analysis as a fundamental discipline adequate to contemporary adversarial environments. It argues that the traditional tradecraft paradigm—grounded in tacit integration, experiential compression, and hierarchical resolution—has reached structural saturation under conditions of reflexive adaptation, cross-domain embedding, and intentionally engineered informational distortion.</p> <p>The article introduces the concept of structural uncertainty: a persistent analytic condition in which partial observability is compounded by adversarial design, and where informational fields may be strategically shaped to influence institutional interpretation. Under such conditions, opacity of inference becomes not merely a methodological limitation but a systemic vulnerability.</p> <p>In response, the work establishes the foundations of Structural Counterintelligence Analysis. It defines the adversarial configuration as the formal unit of analysis and articulates core methodological components: explicit axiomatic commitments, reconstructable hypothesis architecture, probabilistic articulation and longitudinal calibration, bounded reflexive modeling, and institutionalized mechanisms of cumulative correction.</p> <p>The argument is disciplinary rather than rhetorical. It contends that counterintelligence analysis must externalize its inferential structure in order to remain proportionate to reflexive adversarial systems. The transition proposed is not the refinement of tradecraft but its subordination within a formally constituted analytic architecture.</p> <p>This text functions as a theoretical foundation for further methodological formalization and empirical application.</p> |
| title | Counterintelligence Analysis as a Fundamental and Formal Science: The End of the Tradecraft Paradigm |
| topic | Structural Counterintelligence Analysis counterintelligence theory tradecraft paradigm structural uncertainty adversarial reflexivity adversarial configuration probabilistic calibration epistemology of intelligence hybrid threats analytic formalization Social sciences Social science Politics International politics Political sciences |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18717001 |