As the Soviet threat to North America evolved in the early Cold War, the world was watching. What was the view from Ottawa? Watching the Bear begins to tell that story. Alan Barnes, a twenty-five-year veteran of the Canadian intelligence community, draws on recently declassified archival sources to offer a wholly new perspective on Canada's policies for the defence of North America from 1946 to 1964.
After the Second World War, Canada created an independent capacity to produce strategic intelligence assessments, and Canadian analysts worked with their American counterparts to prepare joint appraisals of the looming Soviet menace. Canadian and American conclusions often differed significantly, but Canada's success in negotiating the ensuing tensions was instrumental in ensuring that the two countries developed a common basis for defence planning.
By bringing little-known intelligence documentation to light, Watching the Bear makes a groundbreaking contribution to the history of Canadian intelligence, defence, and foreign relations.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1 Laying the Foundation for Canadian Strategic Assessments
2 Early Assessments of the Threat to North America, 1946–47
3 American-Canadian Agreed Intelligence, 1948–50
4 Canada-US Assessments, 1951–58
5 Disagreement over the Soviet Bomber Threat, 1958
6 CANUS Assessments, 1959–64
7 Reviewing the Record
Annex: Soviet Bomber Strengths
Note on Sources; Notes; Bibliography; Index
About the Author :
Alan Barnes worked for over two decades in the Canadian intelligence community and is currently a senior fellow of the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University. He served as a military intelligence officer, in the Political Intelligence Division of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, and as director of the Intelligence Assessment Secretariat, Middle East and Africa Division. He is now a co-leader of the Canadian Foreign Intelligence History Project, which seeks to encourage the study of historical Canadian records on intelligence.
Review :
"Barnes's unrivalled archival research and his grasp of the content of three decades of strategic analysis of the Soviet threat ensure Watching the Bear will remain a unique and invaluable resource for years to come."-- "Wesley Wark, Centre for International Governance Innovation, University of Waterloo"
"It is difficult to overstate the original contribution made by Watching the Bear. This book not only adds to scholarly debate but has the potential to jumpstart a new field of intelligence history in Canada."-- "Timothy Sayle, Department of History, University of Toronto"