From the viewpoint of the intelligence community, the term meteorological intelligence is more limited in its use referring to the use of clandestine or technical means to learn about environmental conditions over enemy territory (Shulsky and Schmitt 2002).
•
An early reference to "meteorological intelligence" in England dates an 1866 issue of The Edinburgh Review which was a prominent Scottish journal during the 19th century (Reeve 1866, pg. 75).
Central Intelligence Agency | World Meteorological Organization | Secret Intelligence Service | artificial intelligence | military intelligence | intelligence | Office of Naval Intelligence | Director of Central Intelligence | Inter-Services Intelligence | Economist Intelligence Unit | Artificial Intelligence | Artificial intelligence | American Meteorological Society | Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act | Intelligence | Iraqi Intelligence Service | Defense Intelligence Agency | United States Intelligence Community | Intelligence quotient | intelligence (information gathering) | Intelligence Corps | Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute | Royal Meteorological Society | National Intelligence Council | Intelligence Corps (United Kingdom) | Félix Rodríguez (Central Intelligence Agency) | United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence | The Intelligence of Dogs | Signals intelligence | Military Intelligence |