The who’s who, the Michelin guide to corruption and the corrupted at the highest levels of the State? In 350 pages, Jean Guisnel describes for us this world of the arms market, the market of death.
It’s not very bright, through recent events we discover the scandals of bribes, kickbacks, the financing of political parties, electoral campaigns, and international exchanges. If we still had any faith in politicians, it crumbles when reading this book where the author names names, states facts, there is no ambiguity, no doubt. Corruption is indeed present.
Armes de Corruption Massive reveals the backstage of power with politicians who have become ministers and high-ranking officials and military personnel who need to be dismissed because they are not of the party or are resistant to bribes. The rule of this game, where men, women, and children are the primary victims of wars and revolutions, is very simple: everyone has a file on everyone else, you open it, you close it, you forget it, you bring it out again, it all depends on the partner.
Thus, this market is a game of poker where cheating is the rule, woe to those who refuse to load the dice or discard the cards. The stakes are gigantic, millions, even billions of dollars are on the table for the purchase of planes, ships, and tanks.
They even buy generals and admirals. Armes de Corruption Massive, a book to read to better understand the murky world of politics.
Thierry Jan