Starfleet Intelligence

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Overview

Similar to the more famous Intelligence Agencies of the past such as the CIA, KGB and MI6 (or SIS) the role of Starfleet Intelligence (SFI) is to provide the Federation with a galactic covert capability to promote and defend the security and well-being of the Federation and it's member worlds.

Ultimately an Intelligence unit or taskforce is made up of a number of different sections, all with section leaders who report to the Head or Director of the taskforce. The Director may be required to pass on relevant mission related data to the ranking Starfleet Officer on site. While the work that SFI does in generally inclusive the end result can have far reaching consequence. While SFI does have a mandate to operate independently the best results are brought about by working alongside other branches of Starfleet.

Sections

The sections within an Intelligence unit can broadly be broken down into 3 different areas, Field Operations, Operational Technology and Analysts. Given the wide variety of jobs within each of these sections, officers specialise in one particular area of the section which they are within.

Field Operations

Field Operations governs the deployment and control of Field Operatives or Agents deployed from the Intelligence taskforce. Agents can be deployed in a number of formats ranging from anything tactical insertion to the covert placement of a single operative. Length of deployment depends on the source of the Intelligence unit, on the whole sort term operations are deployed from Starships while longer term operations including undercover operations are from Starbase's or other fixed position sites.

In general, Field Operatives are the muscle of the Intelligence Department when needed, yet there is more to the job than that. Specialities within are wide ranging from 'Human' Intelligence to such tasks as covert surveillance, electronics and demolition. Other more obvious specialties that fall within the realm of Field Operations would include interrogation and the art of getting into somewhere where you should not be.

Operations Technology

Operation Technology (or Op Tech.) work to enhance standard equipment, to come up with new solutions to problems and to maintain the Intelligence units equipment ranging from phasers to computers. From the planning stage of a mission Op Tech need to be made aware of the particularly of the mission to determine whether changes to existing equipment is needed or whether customer built specialist equipment is required for the mission to be successful.

Depending on deployment location the job can have more mundane duties to perform. Given the type of jobs that need to be performs by Op Tech the skill base is wide and varied. It should be noted that in all but the largest Intelligence units Op Tech works on a rather small scale, anything larger than something a normal person can carry would require the assistance engineering.

Analyst

The Analyst section is generally regarded as the largest section although this would depend on the mandate of the Intelligence unit. The Analyst section two main sections are between Data and Communication analysts. The jobs of both are to collect, compile and analyze information from any number of different sources and pass any value information onto the Director. When an ongoing mission in underway Communication Analysts are tasked with keeping the Field Operatives in contact with the ship and to keep the contact hidden while monitoring all on going Communications.

The Data Analysts monitor what the Field Operatives are actually doing remotely while providing support information to any problems that the Field Operatives face. The section leaders of both Data and Communication Analyst report directly to the Director who has overall control of the operation. Data Analysts are also tasked with Crypto-analysis, the task of deciphering and analysing enemy cryptographic codes.

Director of Intelligence

The Director of the Intelligence unit ultimately has to govern when, where and how the unit operates with relation to the overall mission of the ship or facility that they are on. Strong links with the XO or CO with the parent unit are required that that both know what they other is broadly doing. Other than serving as a liaison the Director is also required run the Intelligence unit in the same manner in which a department head runs any other grouping of officers.