The provided document, "Perfidious Albion: A History of Deception," argues that British foreign policy has been characterized by a consistent and systematic pattern of diplomatic deception for over 800 years. It asserts that this wasn't a series of isolated incidents, but rather an institutionalized approach to statecraft where agreements and promises were viewed as tactical instruments to be violated when convenient.
The document traces this pattern from medieval treaties in Ireland, like the Treaty of Windsor, to modern events like Brexit. It identifies key techniques of duplicity, including: the deliberate use of ambiguous language to create deniable obligations, the exploitation of cultural and legal differences for strategic advantage, the systematic abandonment of allies once their usefulness expired, and the use of constitutional promises to maintain control. The book claims that these methods were refined in colonial "laboratories" like Ireland and India before being exported globally. The text concludes by asserting that this institutional legacy of deception continues to influence British foreign policy and has contributed to a global climate of mistrust in international relations.