Difference between revisions of "Frank Cooper"

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Sir [[Frank Cooper]] was Permanent Secretary at the [[Northern Ireland Office]] from 1973 to 1976 and at the Ministry of Defence from 1976 to 1982.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1383114/Sir-Frank-Cooper.html Sir Frank Cooper], telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.</ref>
 
Sir [[Frank Cooper]] was Permanent Secretary at the [[Northern Ireland Office]] from 1973 to 1976 and at the Ministry of Defence from 1976 to 1982.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1383114/Sir-Frank-Cooper.html Sir Frank Cooper], telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.</ref>
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==Ministry of Defence==
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According to journalists Duncan Campbell and Patrick Forbes, following the imprisonment of [[Colin Wallace] ] in 1981, "About the same time a secret memorandum went to Defence Ministry Permanent Under Secretary Sir Frank Cooper, warning him that Wallace had both the information and the motive to reveal the story behind [[Kincora]].<ref>[http://www.duncancampbell.org/menu/journalism/newstatesman/newstatesman-1986/gov%20must%20answer%20kincora%20questions.pdf Government must answer Kincora questions], ''New Statesman'', 28 February 1986.</ref>
  
 
==Retirement==
 
==Retirement==
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::The ease with which he transferred from the Civil Service to related jobs in the private sector, however, added to the general controversy over the recruitment of civil servants into sensitive jobs in private industry, which eventually led to a tightening of the rules.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1383114/Sir-Frank-Cooper.html Sir Frank Cooper], telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.</ref>
 
::The ease with which he transferred from the Civil Service to related jobs in the private sector, however, added to the general controversy over the recruitment of civil servants into sensitive jobs in private industry, which eventually led to a tightening of the rules.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1383114/Sir-Frank-Cooper.html Sir Frank Cooper], telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.</ref>
  
In 1986, Cooper told the ''New Statesman'': 'I think there's always been doubts as to who [[Harold Wilson|Wilson]] associated with, there's always been worries about that'.Mentioning some of Wilson's friends, Cooperadded: 'I think if you've got a Prime Minister who has got friends of a doubtful character, thenyou've got to be careful'"<ref>Duncan Campbell, Patrick Forbes and Jolyon Jenkins, [ The MI5 Affair can the Spooks be Trusted?], ''New Statesman'', 5 December 1986.</ref>
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In 1986, Cooper told the ''New Statesman'':
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::'I think there's always been doubts as to who [[Harold Wilson|Wilson]] associated with, there's always been worries about that'. Mentioning some of Wilson's friends, Cooper added: 'I think if you've got a Prime Minister who has got friends of a doubtful character, then you've got to be careful'"<ref>Duncan Campbell, Patrick Forbes and Jolyon Jenkins, [ The MI5 Affair can the Spooks be Trusted?], ''New Statesman'', 5 December 1986.</ref>
  
 
==External Resources==
 
==External Resources==

Latest revision as of 23:52, 22 November 2013

Sir Frank Cooper was Permanent Secretary at the Northern Ireland Office from 1973 to 1976 and at the Ministry of Defence from 1976 to 1982.[1]

Ministry of Defence

According to journalists Duncan Campbell and Patrick Forbes, following the imprisonment of [[Colin Wallace] ] in 1981, "About the same time a secret memorandum went to Defence Ministry Permanent Under Secretary Sir Frank Cooper, warning him that Wallace had both the information and the motive to reveal the story behind Kincora.[2]

Retirement

The Telegraph notes of Cooper's 1982 retirement:

Through his business contacts, he became deputy chairman of Babcock International, chairman of United Scientific Holdings, and joined a number of other boards, including N M Rothschild.
The ease with which he transferred from the Civil Service to related jobs in the private sector, however, added to the general controversy over the recruitment of civil servants into sensitive jobs in private industry, which eventually led to a tightening of the rules.[3]

In 1986, Cooper told the New Statesman:

'I think there's always been doubts as to who Wilson associated with, there's always been worries about that'. Mentioning some of Wilson's friends, Cooper added: 'I think if you've got a Prime Minister who has got friends of a doubtful character, then you've got to be careful'"[4]

External Resources

Notes

  1. Sir Frank Cooper, telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.
  2. Government must answer Kincora questions, New Statesman, 28 February 1986.
  3. Sir Frank Cooper, telegraph.co.uk, 30 January 2002.
  4. Duncan Campbell, Patrick Forbes and Jolyon Jenkins, [ The MI5 Affair can the Spooks be Trusted?], New Statesman, 5 December 1986.