Retired Lieutenant General William Odom was the director of the National Security Agency between 1985 and 1988.
Currently a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a professor at Yale University, Odom has been an outspoken critic of
the Bush administration’s foreign policy.
You’ve described Iraq as the greatest strategic mistake that the United States has ever made. Could you elaborate
on that?
A shorthand way is to reflect on what happened to the Hapsburg Empire. There is an analogy here with bin Laden
and 9/11 and his taking refuge in Afghanistan. I think invading Afghanistan made some sense because we were going after the
culprit. But when we went into Iraq, we were invading a country that didn’t have anything to do with 9/11. This has
set in motion some of the same kind of consequences that the Hapsburgs set in motion by their ultimatum to Serbia, which started
World War I and led to their own destruction.
Rather than losing the United States as an empire, what we’re doing is losing Europe. In other words, we’re
essentially destroying NATO. And NATO has provided a supra-national-political-military
substitute for government in Europe, which has allowed the longest period of peace and prosperity in the history of Europe.
Whether that can continue without NATO or without a strong U.S.-European connection through formal institutions
is most doubtful.
So we would essentially be destroying this international system.
Absolutely, but what we are destroying is not a territorial empire, it is an ideological empire. The ideology’s
not democracy; it’s liberalism with a capital L. Liberal countries are countries that have constitutions. They brought
the state under control. They limit the power of the state, they make it the honest referee. Those countries have always become
democratic in their decision-making procedures, but countries that become democratic without first having a solid constitutional
agreement almost never turn out to be liberal.
And unlike previous empires, countries have generally fought to get in this one, not to get out.
Remember that in the fall of 2001, the U.S. had over 90 countries participating in five sub-coalitions in the anti-terrorism
coalition. We never have had so much international support in our history. And we had NATO, without any
urging, invoking Article 5 of the treaty saying that bin Laden’s attack on the United States was an attack on them.
U.S. international support began to erode only when the president announced the “Axis of Evil” in January
2002. And I remember being confused as to what the Europeans were talking about until I heard a couple of senior diplomats—deputy
chiefs of mission of major NATO countries—saying, “We signed up to fight al-Qaeda, and when
we heard the president’s speech, he was asking us to declare war on Iraq, Iran, North Korea.”
They didn’t sign up for that, and they weren’t even asked. And then the president marches on, acting
as if Europeans were fools because they didn’t sign up for the war, as if they were out of place to question whether
they should even be consulted.
A lot of people have talked about the reasons why we made the mistake of going into Vietnam. It’s harder to get
a handle on why we made the mistake in Iraq. How do we find out what the reasons were?
Only thing we could do is ask Mr. Bush. It seems to me that it’s pretty hard to imagine us going into Iraq
without the strong lobbying efforts from AIPAC [American Israeli Public Affairs Committee] and the neocons,
who think they know what’s good for Israel more than Israel knows. The invisible elephant in the room on this issue
is the Israeli factor. People don’t like to talk about it. Now that we’re in there, we’re getting to realize
that the war is creating far more dangers for Israeli security than it’s provided improvements for Israeli security.
I think you’re going to see a Shiite Islamic regime in at least a large part of Iraq and it’s going
to cooperate with Iran, and Iran with Hezbollah in Lebanon, and that will create all kinds of trouble for Israel.
It’s a lot of hubris, a lot of intellectual arrogance, on the part of neocons who think they know what’s
better for everybody else.
So put that all aside. The most important thing to remember is to go back and use the Vietnam example. Our failure
after 1964, after the Gulf of Tonkin, when we decided to increase the troop levels, was not to ask the question, again and
again, what was our strategic purpose in Vietnam and did it make any sense.
I remember that James Graham, who was the CIA’s Asia guy, also argued against the war until Kissinger finally forced
him out. So, the agency wasn’t on board for that war either.
To blame the intelligence community is a big mistake. Intelligence communities are not free. They’re hired
agents for a particular administration, which picks their leaders. Take this analogy from the corporate world: Have you ever
heard of a board of directors firing a vice president for marketing? No, corporate boards fire the CEO because it’s
the CEO’s job to hire the vice president for marketing. So if the Congress is so upset with the CIA’s performance
on the war, they should impeach the president.
Is there much chance in your view that the Congress is going to weigh in on Iraq or on the possibility of further confrontations
with Iran anytime soon?
The Iraq issue will come back because it’s just going to get worse. The administration may find some cover
to cut and run. I would not be surprised to see in a few months, when the Shiites are pretty well ensconced in the government,
they may just say it’s time for you fellas to leave.
Which would be great.
It would be great in the sense of not staying longer, but then we would be facing the strategic ramifications for
Iraq and the region, which we are going to have to face sooner or later anyways. And that is that we have actually put in
the driver’s seat a country whom we have defined arbitrarily as one of our worst enemies, Iran.
There is a knee-jerk tendency to say, “Well, if we left, it would be a mess. Therefore, we can’t leave.”
That requires blinding oneself to the fact—the reality—that our presence is creating the mess, that we don’t
keep a mess from happening by staying, and that we don’t have the alternative of not creating a mess. When we crossed
the border of Iraq with the invasion, all these untoward outcomes were inexorably going to happen.
From the beginning I was unambiguously against this war. I said that the U.S. invasion of Iraq is not in our interest,
it is in the interest of al-Qaeda and the interest of Iran.
Have people come back to you to say, “General Odom, you were right?”
It’s not anything particularly brilliant on my part. We have all been made to put up with this preposterous
illusion. It’s like somebody telling you, “There’s no cloud in the sky today.” And when you look up
and can’t see the sun, you say, “You know, I don’t see the sun.” It doesn’t take a lot of insight
to point out that there’s no sunshine up there.
It seems like there are a lot of dishonest people making policy so we’re left to figure out how to deal with that.
People see these statements coming out of Washington and think, “Well, my gosh, how do I make sense of that?”
The sad thing to me in that regard is that the Democrats gave the public virtually no real choice in the last election.
So I’m not terribly surprised at the way it came out, but I don’t think it really reflects where the public stands
on the war in Iraq. I’ve given up on the Democrats. I think the best hope right now, for the next election, is to find
a Republican who will say that the war is a mistake strategically and then get out.
There was an article in Der Spiegel saying American emissaries had been trying to convince the Germans and Turks and so
forth to prepare for some kind of assault on Iran. Do you see any realistic chance that we are now going to start confronting
Iran?
I would have, in the past, said it’s almost too ridiculous to take seriously. But given this administration’s
record, I’m reluctant to rule it out.
You can look at this and make a very strong case that by naming the “Axis of Evil” and invading Iraq,
we have actually strengthened North Korea and strengthened Iran. They’ll both end up with nuclear weapons, whereas they
might not have if we hadn’t done this. If you had a good reason to invade Iraq, and I don’t think we did, you
shouldn’t have lumped Iraq together with Iran as enemies until after you had achieved what you wanted to achieve in
Iraq. Surely you don’t want two enemies out there. Why not have Iraq’s other enemy, Iran, on your side?