May 17, 2008

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Angelo M. Codevilla

He received his B.A. from Rutgers University, an M.A. from Notre Dame University, and his Ph.D. in Security Studies, U.S. Foreign Policy, and Political Theory from the Claremont Graduate School.

At Boston University since 1995, Professor Codevilla has been a U.S. Naval Officer, an Assistant Professor at the Grove City College and North Dakota State College, a U.S. Foreign Service Officer, and a member of President-Elect Reagan's Transition Teams within the U.S. Department of State. He dealt with Western Europe and with matters affecting the U.S. Intelligence Community. He served as a U.S. Senate Staff member dealing with oversight of the intelligence services, a professorial lecturer at Georgetown University and a Senior Research Fellow for the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

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Speaking Topics

  • Missile Defense
  • National Security
  • Israel

Articles

  • The Way to Missile Defense

    May 5, 2001 ::

    President Bush says the 1972 ABM Treaty has outlived its usefulness. The question now is whether the administration will officially withdraw from the treaty. That’s the next great step toward a national missile defense, writes senior fellow Angelo Codevilla.
  • Missile Defense: the Hard Way

    July 26, 2000 ::

    The Clinton Administration intends to build a national defense that puts the ideology of the ABM Treaty ahead of saving the lives of Americans, writes senior fellow Angelo Codevilla.
  • Missile Defense: Why Pay for Pretense?

    May 11, 1998 ::

    This year, like most other years for the past generation, the U.S. government will spend more than $3 billion in the name of defense against ballistic missiles. Since 1983, we have spent some $46 billion. And this year, exactly like every other year, this money will buy not a single solitary piece of equipment that might possibly be used to keep even one foreign missile from landing on the American people.

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