Description
Surveillance and Counter-Surveillance Tradecraft: A Professional Doctrine for Intelligence, Security, and Protective Operations presents surveillance not as a cinematic skill, but as a disciplined, methodical practice grounded in planning, observation, judgment, and ethical control.
This book treats surveillance and counter-surveillance as two inseparable sides of the same professional doctrine. It explains how hostile surveillance develops, how it is detected, and how disciplined counter-surveillance protects people, operations, and institutions. The focus is not on gadgets or dramatized tactics, but on human behavior, pattern recognition, operational security, and decision-making under uncertainty.
Written by a career intelligence and security practitioner, the book integrates field-tested principles with structured analytical frameworks. It covers surveillance detection, route analysis, behavioral indicators, cover discipline, protective intelligence, and the transition from observation to preventive action. Equal emphasis is placed on avoiding false positives, managing cognitive bias, and respecting legal and ethical boundaries.
Designed for intelligence professionals, protective security personnel, law enforcement officers, corporate security teams, and advanced students, this work functions as a doctrinal manual rather than a how-to handbook. It avoids classified material and sensationalism, offering instead durable concepts applicable across urban, rural, VIP protection, corporate, and counterterrorism environments.
At its core, the book reinforces a central truth of modern security operations: surveillance is rarely visible when done well—and counter-surveillance succeeds not through force, but through awareness, discipline, and informed decision-making.


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