Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security

by Sarah Chayes

Hardcover, 2015

Status

Available

Publication

W. W. Norton & Company (2015), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 272 pages

Description

A former advisor to the Joint Chiefs of Staff explains the common role of corruption in today's international uprisings, tracing corruption since the 1990s while arguing that corrupt governments have been largely responsible for extreme acts of rebellion.

User reviews

LibraryThing member rivkat
Fascinating book about the terrible costs of corruption in developing nations, and also about the costs to America of supporting corrupt regimes and systems in the name of stability (and patronizing assumptions that the citizens of those regimes are inured to corruption so it’s not a big deal).
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Chayes has extensive experience in Afghanistan, but also discusses various Middle Eastern countries where she identifies similar dynamics, and says that other experts saw similarities with narcoterrorism etc. in other afflicted countries. The basic argument: when corruption reaches down into citizens’ everyday lives, such that they can’t plan on going to market or getting a business license without paying a bribe—and maybe without even any certainty about how much the officials/police will take—they are outraged, and willing to listen to radicals who promise that only strict religious control can fix the worldly corruption in government. Corrupt regimes then use the threat of religious extremists and separatists to extract more support from the US, which support they use to strengthen their power networks and to validate their legitimacy. Chayes tells a terrifically depressing story of American officials who were either ignorant of the corruption going on in their names (as she initially was) or indifferent, not understanding corruption’s devastating long-term effects on security. It’s hard not to read books like this and think that we should really just get the hell out, and not just militarily; Chayes has suggestions for constructive engagement that pushes in the direction of reform, but her experience indicates that the political will to implement tough stances against corrupt officials is generally lacking in American representatives abroad.
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LibraryThing member bohannon
Amazing work. interesting motif of alternating between accounts of the author's time in Afghanistan, and selections from various historical works on the danger's of corruption. Very well worth the time.

Note: Borrowed from the Anne Arundel County Library as audio CD

(2018)

Awards

LA Times Book Prize (Finalist — 2015)
Booklist Editor's Choice: Adult Books (Social Sciences — 2015)

Language

Original publication date

2015

Physical description

272 p.; 6.5 inches

ISBN

0393239462 / 9780393239461

Local notes

politics
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