ORF Report: Global Intelligence Faces Rapid Transformation, India Must Adapt

A new ORF report argues that global intelligence is being fundamentally reshaped by digital interconnectedness, shifting power dynamics, and the rise of private sector actors. It introduces the concept of "geotechnography," where physical geography blends with digital space, creating volatile transnational narratives that agencies must monitor. The study emphasizes that while technology is crucial, well-cultivated human intelligence (HUMINT) networks remain vital for understanding adversary intentions. For India, the report underscores an urgent need to strengthen its intelligence capabilities, including HUMINT, supply-chain security, and collaboration with both partner states and the private R&D ecosystem.

Key Points: Intelligence Transformation & India's Need to Strengthen: ORF

  • Digital interconnectedness pressures traditional intelligence
  • Geotechnography blends physical and digital spaces for monitoring
  • Private sector intelligence blurs lines with national security
  • Human intelligence (HUMINT) remains vital amid tech evolution
  • India must strengthen capabilities and partner collaboration
3 min read

Global Intelligence faces rapid transformation, India must strengthen capabilities: ORF Report

ORF report details how tech & geopolitics are reshaping global intelligence, urging India to boost HUMINT, supply-chain security, and private sector ties.

"geotechnography... enables the rapid mutation of transnational political affiliations and narratives - ORF Report 'Swords and Shields'"

New Delhi, January 12

A major new paper from the Observer Research Foundation outlines how geopolitical volatility and technological change are fundamentally reshaping the world of national intelligence. Authored by Samir Saran, President, ORF, and Archishman Ray Goswami, Non-Resident Fellow, ORF, and a DPhil International Relations candidate at the University of Oxford, the study 'Swords and Shields: Navigating the Modern Intelligence Landscape' examines emerging trends that intelligence agencies must confront in the decade ahead.

The ORF report argues that traditional intelligence practices are under pressure from a combination of digital interconnectedness, shifting global power dynamics, and the rise of private sector intelligence actors. It highlights how "geotechnography" - the blending of physical geography with digital space, now enables the rapid mutation of transnational political affiliations and narratives that intelligence services must monitor and interpret in real time.

The report says that it is incumbent upon national intelligence agencies to develop the analytical capabilities to better relate global developments to local ones in order to pre-empt the proliferation of sudden, volatile forms of social and political identity in a more fractious geopolitical landscape.

The authors note that competing nations are increasingly struggling for influence over critical physical resources, especially rare-earth elements. These materials are central to modern technologies and are expected to intensify strategic competition, requiring intelligence agencies to adapt beyond conventional regional missions.

Human intelligence (HUMINT), long considered the backbone of espionage, is also evolving amid ubiquitous technical surveillance and sophisticated open-source intelligence (OSINT). While digital tools now shape much of what intelligence services can access, the report stresses that well-cultivated human networks remain vital for understanding adversaries' intentions.

Another key theme is the growing role of private sector intelligence, from Big Tech data analytics to corporate espionage, which is increasingly interwoven with national security. This blurs the line between government espionage and commercial information gathering, creating both opportunities and vulnerabilities for state actors. The report says that the growing power of Big Tech, propelled by their access to enormous quantities of data beyond the reach of even large intelligence services, portends massive changes within the global intelligence landscape.

For India specifically, the ORF paper underscores the need to strengthen its intelligence capabilities, including supply-chain security, HUMINT capacity, and collaboration with partner states. A greater emphasis on growing its HUMINT capacities while remaining cognizant of the technological constraints shaping it, is vital, says the report. As India ascends as a major global economy, its intelligence services must adapt to a more complex and competitive strategic environment.

The report cites the establishment of In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm focused on emerging technologies, by the CIA in the late 1990s which helped the US maintain its strategic and technological edge and recommends that the Indian government dedicate resources to a similar fund for the R&AW. Establishing smooth liaison channels with India's indigenous R&D ecosystem, much of which exists as part of the private sector, is vital, emphasising self-sufficiency as India grows as an independent power in a more competitive world, says the report.

The authors conclude that the winners of tomorrow's geopolitical contests will be nations whose intelligence communities can integrate technological advances with strategic foresight and adaptability.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Absolutely agree on strengthening HUMINT. Drones and satellites are great, but you still need people on the ground to understand the *why* behind actions. Also, the private sector collaboration is key. We have brilliant tech minds in Bangalore and Hyderabad; their talent should be leveraged for national security.
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Rohit P
The In-Q-Tel model suggestion is brilliant! We need to stop playing catch-up and start innovating. A dedicated fund for R&AW to invest in cutting-edge Indian startups would be a game-changer. Let's build our own Silicon Valley for defence tech.
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Sarah B
As someone who works in data analytics, the power of Big Tech is undeniable. The report is right to flag this. The amount of behavioural data held by private companies is staggering. Nations need frameworks to ethically collaborate with them for security, without compromising citizen privacy. A tough but necessary balance.
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Vikram M
Good analysis, but I hope this isn't just another paper that gathers dust. Implementation is everything. Our bureaucratic processes can be slow, while threats evolve at digital speed. We need agility and political will to act on these recommendations.
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Karthik V
The focus on rare-earth elements is spot on. It's not just about military intelligence anymore; economic and supply chain security is paramount. China's dominance in this area is a clear strategic vulnerability for us and the world. Our agencies must develop deep expertise in these new frontiers.

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