In short, if we can understand how political structures affect the behavior of small states, it will be a major contribution to the field of security/intelligence studies enabling policy makers, scholars and the general public to separate fact from myth in analyzing the strategic policies of small states.
Patrick C. Coaty is Professor and Chairman at Orange Coast College in California, USA.
Chapter 1: Introduction: The Importance of an Engaged Public on Strategic and Intelligence Issues.- Chapter 2: Analytical Foundations: Small States and the use of Theory in Crisis Management.- Chapter 3: International Organizations/Conventions as Political Structures.- Chapter 4: From Small Seeds: Small Revolutionary States in Search of a conventional arsenal, the formation of the United States Navy, Imperial Japan’s Navy and France’s Navy (1789-1860).- Chapter 5: Small States in Search of Nuclear Weapons (the “successful” cases): Israel, Iran and Pakistan and the formation of a nuclear arsenal.- Chapter 6: Small States in Search of Chemical and Biological Weapons: Italy (1930s), Iraq, Syria and the formation of a chemical arsenal.- Chapter 7: Are Small States in Search of David’s Sling? General Findings and Theory Building.- Chapter 8: Conclusion: Focusing the analytical lens on small states—preparing the next generation by designing training scenarios focused on the behaviour of small states.