Sentence examples for on which intelligence from inspiring English sources

Exact(7)

For more than 20 years, prosecutors have been prohibited from making decisions on which intelligence wiretaps to apply for because the standards of proof are widely believed to be lower than for regular criminal wiretaps.

But they are umbilically linked to the intention, repeated by Mr Clarke yesterday, to publish a green paper next year, with legislation to follow, which will massively tighten the terms on which intelligence information can be disclosed in courts.

She was forced to conceal these in Who's Who, for example, as Fany (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry) and the Foreign Office, because those were the terms on which intelligence agents were employed.

But viewing it through the prism of the Wilson years raises real questions about the assumptions on which intelligence work is based, about the quality of evidence adduced and about the abandonment of normal principles of democracy supposedly for a "more important purpose".

It is a telling formulation, because it concedes at the outset the point on which intelligence officials invariably insist: that there are rules and procedures, safeguards and oversight mechanisms, meant to guarantee that the vast quantities of information ingested by the NSA and its global partners are used only for good purposes.

What I do know is that the inquiry will publish documents that set out clearly how Blair promised US President George W Bush a year before the invasion that he would back regime change to overthrow Saddam Hussein, but proposed setting a trap for the Iraqi dictator based on his alleged WMD, on which intelligence was "poor".

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Similar(53)

News of Mr. Rajaratnam's arrest has also shaken the secretive hedge fund world, in which intelligence on companies is often shared among Wall Street analysts, traders and other investors.

There is not much here on which the intelligence professional can really build.

That makes four fronts on which the intelligence apparatus is under siege.

It located its overseas jails based largely on which foreign intelligence officials were most accommodating and rushed to move the prisoners when word of locations leaked.

A March 2002 Cabinet Office options paper suggested that Saddam's weapons of mass destruction (on which the intelligence was "poor") could provide a pretext: A refusal to admit UN inspectors, or their admission and subsequent likely frustration, which resulted in an appropriate finding by the security council could provide the justification for military action.

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