Arming the State: A Global History of the Defense Industry
MTA
From muskets to megaprojects, how weapons manufacturers shaped nations and wars
2nd Edition
*Arming the State* provides a comprehensive global history of the defense industry, tracing its evolution from early modern royal arsenals to the contemporary era of aerospace megaprojects and cyber warfare. The book argues that the manufacture of weapons has never been a purely industrial endeavor; rather, it is a critical intersection of technology, capital, and state power. By examining the rise of the "fiscal-military state," the author illustrates how the need to produce standardized arms like muskets and artillery necessitated the development of modern bureaucracy, national financing, and industrial management.
The narrative follows the industry through the transformative pressures of the Industrial Revolution and two World Wars, which shifted production from artisanal guilds to massive command economies. The book details the emergence of the "military-industrial complex" during the Cold War, highlighting how permanent defense spending and state-funded research and development fueled breakthroughs in jet propulsion, electronics, and nuclear technology. This period solidified a symbiotic relationship between governments and a consolidated group of private "prime contractors" who became essential to national security and regional economies.
In the post-Cold War era, the text explores the industry's transition toward globalization, privatization, and digital integration. It analyzes the "shakeout" of the 1990s that led to massive corporate mergers and the increasing reliance on private contractors for battlefield logistics and services. The later chapters focus on the "Revolution in Military Affairs," where software, systems integration, and autonomous technologies have superseded traditional hardware in strategic importance. This shift has forced the industry to adapt to faster commercial innovation cycles and complex cyber-security challenges.
Ultimately, the book examines the rise of new producers in the Global South and the return of great power competition, which has revitalized debates over industrial policy and supply chain sovereignty. By situating modern procurement dilemmas—such as cost overruns in megaprojects and the ethics of autonomous weapons—within a centuries-long trajectory, the book provides a framework for understanding how the business of war continues to shape the political and economic architecture of the modern world.
This book is essential for students and scholars of history, political science, and international relations seeking to understand the deep historical roots of modern defense policy. Defense industry professionals, policymakers, and military planners will benefit from its analysis of how historical patterns shape contemporary procurement, innovation, and strategic challenges. Additionally, anyone interested in the intersection of technology, economics, and warfare will find value in its comprehensive examination of how arming states has shaped global power dynamics over centuries.
April 1, 2026
51,602 words
3 hours 37 minutes
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