Introduction Seumas Miller, Mitt Regan and Patrick F. Walsh Part I: The Just Intelligence Model 1. Intelligence and the Just War Tradition: The Need for a Flexible Ethical Framework Ross Bellaby 2. Truth-Seeking and the Principles of Discrimination, Necessity, Proportionality and Reciprocity in National Security Intelligence Activity Seumas Miller 3. The Technoethics of Contemporary Intelligence Practice: A Framework for Analysis David Omand and Mark Phythian Part II: Espionage 4. Ethics in the Recruiting and Handling of Espionage Agents David Perry 5. The Rights of Foreign Intelligence Targets Michael Skerker 6. Digital Sleeper Cells and the Ethics of Risk Management Kevin Macnish 7. Intelligence Sharing Among Coalition Forces: Some Legal and Ethical Challenges and Potential Solutions David Letts Part III: Bulk Data Collection and Analysis 8. Privacy, Bulk Collection and "Operational Utility" Tom Sorell 9. Surveillance, Intelligence and Ethics in a COVID19 World Jessica Davis Part IV: Covert Operations 10. Ethics and Covert Action: The "Third Option" in American Foreign Policy Loch Johnson 11. Jus ad Vim: War, Peace and the Ethical Status of the In-between Nicholas Melgaard and David Whetham Part V: Accountability 12. Reaching the Inflection Point: The Hughes-Ryan Amendment and Intelligence Oversight Genevieve Lester and Frank Jones 13. Congressional Oversight of US Intelligence Activities Mary DeRosa 14. Accountability for Covert Action in the United States and the United Kingdom Mitt Regan and Michele Poole Part VI: Future Directions 15. GEOINT and the Post-Secret World: Who Guards the Guards? Robert Cardillo 16. Evolving Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Terrorism: Intelligence Community Response and Ethical Challenges Patrick F. Walsh 17. Reflections on the Future of Intelligence Gregory F. Treverton