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Conflict intelligence
Conflict intelligence is the practice of turning wartime noise — claims, statements, satellite imagery, market data — into a structured picture. These pages explain what that means, why it matters, and how to read the dashboards on this site without being misled by your own confidence.
What is conflict intelligence?
The practice of structuring wartime information into events, claims, actors, sources, and confidence ratings.
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How conflict intelligence differs from news
News reports events. Conflict intelligence structures, verifies, and labels them so they can be read together.
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How to read conflict dashboards
A short guide to the badges, counters, and labels you'll see on intelligence-style sites.
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How to distinguish claims, reports, events, and verified facts
Most wartime mistakes come from confusing these four categories.
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How governments use information during conflict
Information is the cheapest weapon. All sides use it.
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Why source transparency matters
If you can't see where a claim came from, you can't evaluate it.
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How to build a personal conflict brief
A 15-minute daily routine for staying informed without being manipulated.
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