The Houthis recently resumed their campaign against Western shipping in the Red Sea after a couple weeks’ silence.Mohammed Huwais/Getty Images

We need a a whole-of-society approach to intelligence – POLITICO

by · POLITICO

Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, the author of the award-winning Goodbye Globalization” and a regular columnist for POLITICO.

A nondescript suite of rooms in an office building in central Oslo hosts activity of the kind one would normally associate with a military headquarters or the CIA. In the central situation room, a monitor displays activity across the world’s oceans, while analysts at neighboring desks update this information around the clock. But this is not an intelligence agency  — it’s DNK, a Norwegian insurer of maritime war risk.

Today, intelligence is no longer just the domain of government agencies — or, rather, it shouldn’t be. Companies are now far more likely to be harmed by geopolitically linked events than ever before outside of full-scale wars. Thus, they need to keep a constant eye on the world. And if they do, they’re likely to see things that would be equally useful for their governments to know.