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Abstract
Deception in High Places reveals the corruption endemic in Britain's biggest arms deals over the last fifty years.
Based on painstaking research in government archives, collections of private and court papers and documents won by the author in a landmark Freedom of Information Tribunal against the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the book illuminates a shadow world of bribery and elite enrichment.
Deception in High Places charts British government involvement in arms trade corruption and presents the fullest history yet of bribery in Britain’s arms deals with Saudi Arabia. It includes the backstory of the controversial termination of a Serious Fraud Office corruption investigation following pressure by the Saudi Royal Family and the British establishment.
'A remarkable book that exposes the trickery, humbug, buck-passing, and cover-ups, by successive British governments as they turned a blind eye, and even encouraged, the payment of bribes to secure British arms contracts'
Richard Norton-Taylor, The Guardian
'Gilby produces some well-reasoned answers to the most commonly offered justifications for bribery'
Susan Demuth, Middle East Eye
'A devastating portrait of the UK government's complicity in arms deal corruption over many decades. This superbly researched must-read account allows the facts to speak for themselves.'
Andrew Feinstein, author The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade and founding Director of Corruption Watch UK
'A rich history of a rotten business. Gilby's meticulous research shows us just how corruption in the arms trade, sustaining some of the world's most oppressive regimes, festered and grew. And after half a century of complicity and cover-up by the British government, his findings pose the most urgent question of all: why is it still allowed to go on?'
Richard Brooks, Private Eye, author of The Great Tax Robbery: How Britain Became a Tax Haven for Fat Cats and Big Business
'Drawing on a wealth of official documents, Gilby lays bare the subterranean realities of Britain's arms trade and its corrosive impact on the wider political culture. This is a hugely impressive piece of historical research and a fascinating story'
Professor Mark Phythian, author of The Politics of British Arms Sales Since 1964
'Heroically dogged ... Gilby assiduously unveils past sins with contemporary consequences'
New Statesman
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
List of Figures and Illustrations | vi | ||
Acknowledgements | vii | ||
Preface | ix | ||
1. The Chancer: Negotiating BAE's First Saudi Deals (1963-66) | 1 | ||
2. Hand in Glove: Whitehall's Involvement in Bribery Schemes (1968-73) | 21 | ||
3. The 'Deniable Fiddle': Dealing with the Saudi Arabian National Guard (1968-72) | 40 | ||
4. The 'Special Relationship': Britain and the Shah of Iran (1970-78) | 56 | ||
5. Parting Ways: British and American Corruption Scandals (1975-76) | 72 | ||
6. At Arm's Length: How the British Government Avoided Taking Action against Corruption (1976-78) | 92 | ||
7. Thwarted: How International Action against Corruption was Stopped in its Tracks (1975-80) | 110 | ||
8. 'Business as Usual' (1980-2001) | 129 | ||
9. An Investigation Interrupted: The SFO and BAE Systems (2004-10) | 154 | ||
Conclusion | 179 | ||
Notes | 186 | ||
Index | 225 |