A Study Into the Size of the World's Intelligence Industry

Page 98

89

Military Intelligence (DIPOL) 39

Comoros

$511,763.07

250

40

Republic of Congo (Brazzaville)

$10,364,164.21

300

41

D.R. Congo (Kinshasa)

$11,148,162.15

300

$2,164,904.00

195

National Intelligence Agency (ANR) Military Directorate on Anti-state Activities (DMIAP) 42

Costa Rica Security Intelligence Directorate (DIS)

43

Côte d'Ivoire

$2,164,904122

$22,613,771.32

2,050

$66,694,656.84

2,500123

National Security Council

44

Croatia

the total spent for intelligence would be $11428800. See Steven Boraz, "Colombia," in PSI Handbook of Global Security and Intelligence: National Approaches, vol. 1, ed. Stuart Farson, Peter Gill, Mark Phythian, and Shlomo Shpiro (London and Connecticut: Praeger Security International, 2008), 137. 121 Steven Boraz, "Colombia," in PSI Handbook of Global Security and Intelligence: National Approaches, vol. 1, ed. Stuart Farson, Peter Gill, Mark Phythian, and Shlomo Shpiro (London and Connecticut: Praeger Security International, 2008), 137. Also see Steven Boraz, “Establishing Democratic Control of Intelligence in Colombia," International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence 19, no. 1 (2005): 90. 122 Paul Chaves, "Los Espías no Bastan: Definiendo las Politicas Públicas en Materia de Servicios de Inteligenciaen Costa Rica," in Research and Education in Defense and Security Studies (Washington DC: Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies, 2001), http://www.fas.org/irp/world/costa_rica/chaves.html. 123 High Credibility, 44.3, Janes.com > Sentinel Country Risk Library > The Balkans > Croatia > Security and Foreign Forces [accessed October 13, 2008].


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