In Spies We Trust: The Story of Western Intelligence
In Spies We Trust: The Story of Western Intelligence
effectively to that end. At its peak in the 1940s and 1950s, the special intelligence relationship contributed to national and international security in what was an Anglo-American century. But from the 1960s this special relationship went into decline. Britain weakened, American attitudes changed, and the fall of the Soviet Union dissolved the fear that bound London and Washington together. A series of intelligence scandals along the way further eroded public confidence. Yet even in
these years, the US offered its old intelligence partner a vital gift: congressional attempts to oversee the CIA in the 1970s encouraged subsequent moves towards more open government in Britain and beyond. So which way do we look now? And what are the alternatives to the British-American intelligence relationship that held sway in the West for so much of the twentieth century? Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones shows that there are a number - the most promising of which, astonishingly, remain largely unknown to
the Anglophone world.
Author: Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 10/06/2015
Pages: 312
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.85lbs
Size: 8.40h x 5.30w x 0.80d
ISBN: 9780198701903
About the Author
Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones is Emeritus Professor of American History at the University of Edinburgh and has held postdoctoral fellowships at Harvard, the Free University of Berlin, and Toronto. The founder of the Scottish Association for the Study of America, of which is he the current honorary president, he has also published widely on intelligence history, including The CIA and American Democracy (1989) and The FBI: A History (2007).
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