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Age of Deception: Cybersecurity as Secret Statecraft

Book
Jon R. Lindsay
2025
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At the heart of cybersecurity lies a paradox: Cooperation makes conflict possible. In Age of Deception, Jon R. Lindsay shows that widespread trust in cyberspace enables espionage and subversion. While such acts of secret statecraft have long been part of global politics, digital systems have dramatically expanded their scope and scale. Yet success in secret statecraft hinges less on sophisticated technology than on political context.

To make sense of this, Lindsay offers a general theory of intelligence performance—the analogue to military performance in battle—that explains why spies and hackers alike depend on clandestine organizations and vulnerable institutions. Through cases spanning codebreaking at Bletchley Park during WWII to the weaponization of pagers by Israel in 2024, he traces both continuity and change in secret statecraft. Along the way, he explains why popular assumptions about cyber warfare are profoundly misleading. Offense does not simply dominate defense, for example, because the same digital complexity that expands opportunities for deception also creates potential for self-deception and counterdeception.

Provocative and persuasive, Age of Deception offers crucial insights into the future of secret statecraft in cyberspace and beyond.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-viii

Introduction: Intelligence Now

pp. 1-20

Part I. The Political Logic of Deception

1. Defining Secret Statecraft

pp. 23-46

2. A Theory of Intelligence Performance

pp. 47-73

3. Security in Cyberspace

pp. 74-94

Part II. Secret Statecraft in Practice

4. Espionage: Bletchley Park and the Mechanization of Intelligence

pp. 97-124

5. Sabotage: Stuxnet Reinterpreted as Secret Diplomacy

pp. 125-154

6. Subversion: The 2016 US Election and the Demand for Disinformation

pp. 155-179

7. Cyber Power: China and the Contradictions of Cybersecurity

pp. 180-207

Conclusion: Good News and Bad News About Cyber Warfare

pp. 208-232

Notes

pp. 233-266

References

pp. 267-298

Index

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