The CI-Press Podcast

cipress

CI Press: The Counterintelligence Podcast, hosted by IXN Solutions focuses on corporate and government intelligence, counterintelligence, and insider risk programs and personalities. Tune in weekly for the latest episode! Brought to you by IXN Solutions:  www.ixnsolutions.com  Check out our IXN Dispatch for more strategic insights:  IXN Dispatch | Exclusive Counterintelligence and Insider Threat Related Content | Patreon Learn more about 351X: www.ixnsolutions.com/351X  Schedule a 351X Demo:  info@ixnsolutions.com Schedule a Counterintelligence Discussion:  info@ixnsolutions.com 

  1. FEB 26

    CI Press, Episode 103: The U.S. Army Counterintelligence CW5(R) Roundtable, Chapter Three

    In part three of this special three-part series, hosts M. Scott Sparks and Jeremy J. Clark continue their in-depth roundtable with retired U.S. Army CW5s and senior counterintelligence (CI) professionals Glenn Jones, Shawn Michaud, Mike Dye, and Traci Goodwin. The panel tackles one of the most consequential organizational questions facing the CI enterprise today: Should counterintelligence transition to a single, unified career track, or preserve its specialized roles? Drawing on decades of operational experience and strategic leadership, they examine the advantages and risks of both models, exploring how force structure influences readiness, expertise, professional identity, and long-term mission effectiveness. The conversation breaks down the core functions of CI, including collections, operations, investigations, analysis, and functional services, and examines how each discipline contributes to detecting, assessing, and countering foreign intelligence threats. The group discusses the real-world impact of integration versus stovepiping and addresses enduring challenges in talent management, training pipelines, certification standards, and collection management. Throughout the discussion, they offer candid insights and practical recommendations for building a more agile, capable, and lethal CI force. Listeners will also hear compelling historical vignettes and candid deployment stories that bring doctrine to life, illustrating how CI professionals adapt under pressure and evolve with the threat environment. The episode concludes with direct, experience-driven advice for CI warrant officers and leaders on how to stay operationally relevant, advocate effectively for resources, develop depth without sacrificing breadth, and lead teams that are disciplined, adaptable, and ready to protect U.S. national security interests in an increasingly contested world.

    2h 12m
  2. FEB 24

    CI Press, Episode 102: The U.S. Army Counterintelligence CW5(R) Roundtable, Chapter Two

    In part two of this three-part series, hosts M. Scott Sparks and Jeremy J. Clark continue their round table with retired U.S. Army CW5s and senior counterintelligence (CI) professionals Glenn Jones, Shawn Michaud, Mike Dye, and Traci Goodwin. What follows is an unfiltered, practitioner-level assessment of the current state of U.S. CI. The panel tackles one of the profession’s most pressing challenges: talent retention. Drawing on decades of experience, they examine why highly trained CI professionals choose to leave, the institutional pressures that drive burnout or career transitions, and what leadership can do to build meaningful, sustainable career pathways for the next generation of professionals. The discussion also confronts gaps in CI training and education. From inconsistencies in instruction to outdated training models, the group highlights where the system falls short and why modernization is essential. They propose a more unified and standardized approach to CI education that deliberately connects foundational tradecraft, advanced specialization, and continuous professional development to better prepare the force for emerging threats. Beyond structure and policy, this episode centers on the human dimension of the profession. The panel reflects on the role of passion in sustaining long careers in a demanding field, the critical importance of mentorship, and the lessons forged through hardship, institutional friction, and innovation. Part Two continues this candid trilogy with hard-earned insights and honest dialogue about the future direction of American CI and the people responsible for carrying it forward.

    1h 42m
  3. FEB 19

    CI Press, Episode 101: The U.S. Army Counterintelligence CW5(R) Roundtable, Chapter One

    In Part One of this three-part series, hosts M. Scott Sparks and Jeremy J. Clark convene a roundtable of retired U.S. Army CW5s and senior counterintelligence (CI) professionals Glenn Jones, Shawn Michaud, Mike Dye, and Traci Goodwin for an unfiltered, practitioner-level discussion on the state of U.S. counterintelligence. Drawing on decades of CI experience, the panel tackles audience questions spanning the recent rise in espionage arrests, persistent interagency friction, and the broader debate over whether the nation needs a more unified CI authority. The conversation explores the leadership tension between the NCSC and the FBI, examining statutory roles, operational equities, and the practical realities of execution versus oversight. The group also weighs in on the U.S. Army’s evolving off-base search warrant authorities, discussing what they mean for commanders, CI professionals, and joint operations. A recurring theme throughout the episode is the balance between deep technical expertise and broad institutional leadership—when specialization wins, when generalist leadership matters, and how to build both within the force. The episode closes with pragmatic “crawl, walk, run” training advice for CI practitioners and commanders alike, emphasizing disciplined fundamentals, mentorship, and operational credibility as the foundation for navigating today’s complex threat environment. This is Part One of a candid trilogy focused on hard lessons, institutional friction, and the future direction of American CI.

    1h 39m
  4. FEB 12

    CI Press, Episode 99: Dr. Trei McMullen, Florida’s Counterintelligence Shift, A Veteran’s Perspective

    In this episode, hosts Joe Sheridan and Jeremy Clark sit down with Dr. Trei McMullen, combat veteran, counterintelligence professional, entrepreneur, and conservative candidate for Florida State House District 2, for a discussion on the evolving role of counterintelligence at the state level. The conversation explores Florida House Bill 945 and the broader movement toward state-led counterintelligence initiatives. Drawing on his military background and private-sector experience, Dr. McMullen provides a practitioner’s perspective on how states are positioning themselves to better detect, deter, and mitigate foreign intelligence threats within their own jurisdictions. The episode also addresses national security issues with local impact, including school safety vulnerabilities, the rapid proliferation of drone technology, border-related security concerns, and the increasing necessity for synchronized counterintelligence tradecraft across federal and state partners. Throughout the discussion, the hosts examine both the promise and the complexity of decentralizing certain counterintelligence responsibilities while preserving coordination and unity of effort. This episode offers a grounded, operationally informed look at how counterintelligence is moving beyond the federal sphere and into state policy conversations, and what that shift could mean for the future of domestic security in the United States.

    43 min
5
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

CI Press: The Counterintelligence Podcast, hosted by IXN Solutions focuses on corporate and government intelligence, counterintelligence, and insider risk programs and personalities. Tune in weekly for the latest episode! Brought to you by IXN Solutions:  www.ixnsolutions.com  Check out our IXN Dispatch for more strategic insights:  IXN Dispatch | Exclusive Counterintelligence and Insider Threat Related Content | Patreon Learn more about 351X: www.ixnsolutions.com/351X  Schedule a 351X Demo:  info@ixnsolutions.com Schedule a Counterintelligence Discussion:  info@ixnsolutions.com 

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