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USCGIS

Intelligence Specialist

Collects, analyzes, and disseminates intelligence to support Coast Guard operations including counter-narcotics and port security.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

As an Intelligence Specialist, you'll analyze maritime threats, produce intelligence assessments, and support counter-narcotics, counter-terrorism, and homeland security missions. You'll earn a security clearance and develop analytical skills that agencies like the CIA, DHS, and FBI actively recruit for.

What it's actually like

You're an intelligence analyst in a branch that most of the intelligence community forgets HAS an intelligence community presence. 'The Coast Guard has intel?' — yes, and you're tired of that question. You build the maritime threat picture by fusing satellite imagery, human source reports, law enforcement data, and Coast Guard cutter observations to figure out where the drugs are, where the illegal fishing fleets are, who's violating sanctions, and which vessels are doing something that doesn't quite add up but can't be explained by poor seamanship alone. Your analysis directly drives real-world interdiction operations — you brief a target, a cutter deploys, and three days later there's a press conference about a cocaine seizure because of YOUR work. That direct line from intelligence to action is something analysts at three-letter agencies rarely get. The downside: absolutely no one at your high school reunion will understand what you do, and explaining 'maritime intelligence for the Coast Guard' generates a facial expression you've memorized and resent. Your security clearance and analytical skills translate to DHS, CBP, DEA, and the broader intel community. The Coast Guard IS a member of the IC. You just have to keep reminding people.

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MOS Intel

ClearanceTS/SCI
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PromotionFast
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Deploy TempoLow
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BonusUp to $20,000
Career Intel
Duty StationsSector commands · Coast Guard Intelligence (CGI) · CGIS (Investigative Service) · Pentagon (VA) · Various IC assignments
Daily LifeMaritime intelligence analysis — port security assessments, vessel threat analysis, counter-terrorism support, and maritime domain awareness. You analyze intelligence to protect ports, waterways, and the maritime transportation system.
AIT / SchoolA-school at Training Center Yorktown (VA) followed by intelligence analysis training. TS/SCI clearance processing occurs during training.
Physical DemandsLow. Desk-based intelligence analysis.
DeploymentsMostly shore-based; some TDY to support port security and maritime intelligence operations
Certifications
TS/SCI clearanceIntelligence Specialist qualificationVarious IC certifications
Pro Tips
  1. 1Your TS/SCI clearance is your most valuable asset. Maritime intelligence experience is niche and valued by CBP, DHS, and defense contractors.
  2. 2Coast Guard intelligence interfaces with CBP, ICE, DEA, and FBI on maritime issues. Build those interagency relationships.
  3. 3Maritime security consulting is a growing civilian field. Your specific expertise in port and vessel security is commercially valuable.
The Honest Truth

Intelligence Specialist in the Coast Guard is a niche intelligence career focused on maritime threats. The honest truth: it is a smaller intelligence community than the other services, which means less bureaucracy but also fewer billets and advancement opportunities. The maritime focus — port security, vessel threats, smuggling networks — is unique and valued by DHS, CBP, and the broader IC. The TS/SCI clearance opens the same doors as any other service. Maritime security consulting is a growing civilian field and your Coast Guard intelligence experience is commercially valuable.

Training Pipeline
1
Basic Training8w
Cape May (NJ)
2
IS "A" School16w
Yorktown (VA)
Intelligence Specialist — analysis, reporting, maritime intelligence, TS/SCI.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job.

Social Scientists and Related Workers

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
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