The Washington Times

Angelo M. Codevilla

Latest Angelo M. Codevilla Items
  • Defense Secretary Robert Gates speaks during a joint press conference at Malaysia's Ministry of Defense in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2010. (AP Photo/Lai Seng Sin)

    Inside the Ring

    The Pentagon's intelligence directorate is killing off one of its most strategically important mission areas: monitoring efforts by foreign governments to buy U.S. firms and technology, such as the multiple efforts by China's military-linked equipment company Huawei Technologies to buy into the U.S. high-technology sector.


  • Illustration: Democratic delusion by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

    TYRRELL: Psychology of defeated Democrats

    Liberals are having a difficult time explaining what happened to them on Election Day. Actually, it appears that many of them do not know what happened to them. They are in denial.


  • BOOK REVIEW: Toward intolerant secularism

    America now divides ever more sharply into two classes, according to Angelo M. Codevilla, a professor emeritus of international relations at Boston University.


  • Illustration: Scimitar skyline by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

    TYRRELL: No mosque

    There is an awful lot of blowzy thought swirling around the proposed mosque to be raised two blocks from Ground Zero in lower Manhattan. Frankly, I doubt that at any other time in our history, such a debate would be taking place. People would know that when thugs intoning "Allahu Akbar" have slaughtered hundreds of innocent Americans on American soil, it is inappropriate to raise a mosque nearby.


  • Illustration: Elvis and bin Laden

    DE BORCHGRAVE: Elvis bin Laden

    The Veterans Today Network, a one-man show on the Internet created and run by Gordon Duff, a 100 percent disabled Marine Vietnam veteran, states flatly that Sept. 11, 2001, was a CIA-Mossad conspiracy and that Osama bin Laden was not involved and died in 2001. This easily can be dismissed as yet another example of deliberately disseminated disinformation riddled with intentionally false or inaccurate data designed to confuse the adversary. But some key intelligence officials are taking bin Laden's reported demise seriously.


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