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The Fatal Ferranti Factory: The Fraud That Destroyed Britain's Tech Empire In the heart of Chadderton and Edinburgh, there once stood the crown jewel of British electronic engineering—Ferranti International, the legendary company that built the world's first commercial computers and the radar systems that protected the UK throughout the Cold War. Ferranti wasn't merely a manufacturer; it was a century-old institution of innovation, the place where Britain's brightest minds developed cutting-edge defense technology that kept the nation secure and competitive on the global stage. This was British tech supremacy, a company that proved the UK could lead the world in electronics and computing. But in 1987, the board made a catastrophic mistake that destroyed everything. They acquired an American company called ISC, believing it was a lucrative defense contractor with valuable military contracts. It was a lie. ISC was actually a massive illegal front smuggling weapons to South Africa and Iraq, a criminal operation built on forged documents and phantom deals. When Ferranti's auditors slowly uncovered the truth—that the "contracts" were entirely fake—£400 million of the company's value evaporated instantly. The revelation was devastating: a failure of due diligence so spectacular it bankrupted a 100-year-old British institution overnight. The collapse was total. Thousands of highly skilled engineering jobs vanished. The historic Chadderton and Edinburgh factories were sold off to foreign rivals in a humiliating fire-sale. Britain's tech empire, the company that pioneered commercial computing and Cold War defense systems, was dismantled because executives trusted a fraud without verification. This is the story of how corporate incompetence destroyed a national treasure, how one disastrous acquisition killed a century of innovation—and what that scandal says about the fatal arrogance of boardrooms that gamble with legacies they didn't build.