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Beschreibung
The Kill Chain is a work of narrative nonfiction about intelligence, surveillance, and the automation of modern war.
Drawing on reporting, military doctrine, public records, and the history of Unit 8200, Ivo Vichev traces how Israel built a new architecture of conflict in Gaza: one in which mass data collection, biometric surveillance, machine-assisted targeting, and compressed decision cycles reshaped the relationship between information and violence.
This is not a book about technology in the abstract. It is a book about systems, institutions, and power. It follows the long evolution of Israeli signals intelligence from its improvised origins under the British Mandate to the emergence of a military order built on data fusion, target generation, and algorithmic speed. It examines the doctrinal shift toward human-machine teaming, the rise of systems such as Gospel and Lavender, the role of predictive surveillance in Palestinian life, and the transformation of the battlefield into a space that could be continuously searched, classified, and acted upon.
At the centre of the book is a harder question: what happens when a military does not merely use artificial intelligence, but begins to think in its rhythm? As the distance between signal and strike narrows, older forms of judgment, hesitation, and review come under pressure. The result is not simply faster war. It is a new political and moral environment in which human beings are translated into data, territory becomes a dashboard, and violence is increasingly managed through systems that promise precision while often widening scale.
From the checkpoints of Hebron to the bombing campaigns in Gaza, from the internal culture of Unit 8200 to the global spread of AI-enabled military doctrine, The Kill Chain is both a history of one conflict and a warning about the future of warfare itself.
Clear-eyed, deeply researched, and written with narrative force, this book examines how surveillance, targeting, and machine speed are changing the character of war in the twenty-first century.
The Kill Chain is a work of narrative nonfiction about intelligence, surveillance, and the automation of modern war.
Drawing on reporting, military doctrine, public records, and the history of Unit 8200, Ivo Vichev traces how Israel built a new architecture of conflict in Gaza: one in which mass data collection, biometric surveillance, machine-assisted targeting, and compressed decision cycles reshaped the relationship between information and violence.
This is not a book about technology in the abstract. It is a book about systems, institutions, and power. It follows the long evolution of Israeli signals intelligence from its improvised origins under the British Mandate to the emergence of a military order built on data fusion, target generation, and algorithmic speed. It examines the doctrinal shift toward human-machine teaming, the rise of systems such as Gospel and Lavender, the role of predictive surveillance in Palestinian life, and the transformation of the battlefield into a space that could be continuously searched, classified, and acted upon.
At the centre of the book is a harder question: what happens when a military does not merely use artificial intelligence, but begins to think in its rhythm? As the distance between signal and strike narrows, older forms of judgment, hesitation, and review come under pressure. The result is not simply faster war. It is a new political and moral environment in which human beings are translated into data, territory becomes a dashboard, and violence is increasingly managed through systems that promise precision while often widening scale.
From the checkpoints of Hebron to the bombing campaigns in Gaza, from the internal culture of Unit 8200 to the global spread of AI-enabled military doctrine, The Kill Chain is both a history of one conflict and a warning about the future of warfare itself.
Clear-eyed, deeply researched, and written with narrative force, this book examines how surveillance, targeting, and machine speed are changing the character of war in the twenty-first century.
Über den Autor
I was born in Varna, Bulgaria, on the edge of the Black Sea - a place where history is never really "past". Growing up between old empires and new borders, I was surrounded by stories of wars, occupations, disappearances and sudden changes of flag.
Later I moved to Warsaw, Poland, where I studied history and public relations at the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN). Warsaw is a city built on ruins and memories, and it forced me to ask one question over and over again:
Why is so much of our most important history told in the most boring way possible?From dry facts to living stories
Like every history student, I spent endless hours buried in heavy academic books - dates, treaties, footnotes stacked on footnotes. I respected the work, but I often felt like the life had been drained out of the events themselves.
That changed when I discovered Ryszard Kapüciski. His books had that rare tone I'd been searching for: history and politics told through people, scenes and atmosphere. It was factual, but it breathed.
From that moment I knew what I wanted to do: take serious history and tell it with the clarity and tension of a documentary - so future generations don't have to suffer through dead, lifeless books to understand the [...] I write about
My books focus on the places where power is most visible - and most hidden:Wars and battles
Espionage and cyber conflict
Country histories

Some books are big, sweeping national histories. Others zoom in on a single battle, uprising or covert operation. All of them try to answer the same question: What really happened here, and what does it mean for the people who had to live through it?How I tell history
If you read my books, you can expect narrative, scene-by-scene storytelling - not just lists of dates. Serious research from archives, memoirs, official reports and investigative journalism. Clear explanations of complex events like cyberattacks and proxy wars. And a refusal to simplify messy, uncomfortable truths.
I don't write official history. I don't write propaganda. I write stories that are honest, human and readable - the kind of books I was always looking for as a student and rarely found.
If you care about how we got from trenches and partitions to cyberwar and drone strikes - and you don't want to fall asleep over another textbook - I wrote these books for you.
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2026
Genre: Importe, Politikwissenschaften
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
ISBN-13: 9798233173677
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Vichev, Ivo
Hersteller: Ivo Vichev
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 216 x 140 x 16 mm
Von/Mit: Ivo Vichev
Erscheinungsdatum: 04.04.2026
Gewicht: 0,377 kg
Artikel-ID: 134948209

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