Packed with gripping first-hand accounts from the
battlefield to high-level strategic forums, Statecraft gives
you the tools to understand how states collaborate, compete and fight.
Why did Russia struggle in the early months of their full-scale invasion of
Ukraine?
Why does Israel repeatedly ignore international pressure on Gaza?
Why does the UK spend billions on aircraft carriers it struggles to support at
sea?
How do smaller states shape world events when dwarfed by superpowers?
The world today is gripped by conflict at a scale not seen since the Cold War.
Whether in Ukraine, the Middle East or Taiwan, we are in a period of intense
power competition. In Statecraft, Dr Jack Watling takes you into
wood-panelled offices to meet the world’s powerbrokers, or the bunkers from
which battles are coordinated, and explains the mechanics behind these
struggles for supremacy.
Informed by a career on the ground in conflict zones, and advising generals and
political leaders, Watling examines the crucial dilemmas that states face to
get ahead, no matter their size. From economic alliances and global trade to
sea power and military technology, Statecraft provides a
powerful new framework to understand an increasingly divided world.
About the Author
Jack Watling is Senior Research Fellow for Land
Warfare at the Royal United Services Institute in London. He works closely with
the British, Ukrainian and American military, and advises governments on
security and strategy.
He was formally a Global Fellow at the Wilson Center in Washington DC and is
the author of Arms of the Future: Technology and Close Combat in the
Twenty-First Century. Originally a journalist he has contributed to
Reuters, The Atlantic, Foreign Policy and
the Guardian, among others.