Angelo Maria Codevilla was born on May 25, 1943, in Voghera, Italy,[4] son of Angelo (a businessman) and Serena (Almangano) Codevilla. He emigrated to the United States in 1955, and became a United States citizen in 1962.
He graduated from Rutgers University in 1965, having studied natural sciences, languages, and politics. After receiving a Ph.D. in 1973 from Claremont University Center, Codevilla began to teach political science.[1]
By 1980, Codevilla was appointed to the teams preparing the presidential transition for the United States Department of State and the Central Intelligence Agency.[5][3][6] His contributions to national security included helping to conceive the technology programs that, in 1983, were relabeled the Strategic Defense Initiative. Throughout his time in government, Codevilla published on intelligence and national security and taught.
Codevilla held conservative views, advocating non-interference by government in public life.[7]
Pollard case
While acknowledging that Jonathan Pollard was guilty of espionage, Codevilla was one of many who publicly objected on procedural and substantive grounds to the life sentence given the convicted Israeli spy. In 1984, Pollard had sold numerous closely guarded state secrets, including the National Security Agency's ten-volume manual on how the U.S. gathers its signal intelligence, and disclosed the names of thousands of people who had cooperated with U.S. intelligence agencies.[8] He admitted shopping his services—successfully, in some cases—to other countries.[9] In 1987, he was sentenced to life in prison for violations of the Espionage Act. He was released on November 20, 2015, and moved to Israel.
On November 5, 2013, Codevilla wrote to then-President Barack Obama concerning Pollard. He stated, "Others have pointed out that Pollard is the only person ever sentenced to life imprisonment for passing information to an ally, without intent to harm America, a crime which normally carries a sentence of two to four years; and that this disproportionate sentence in violation of a plea agreement was based not on the indictment but on a memorandum that was never shared with the defense. This is not how American Justice is supposed to work." He further stated that his opinion, as those of DCIJames Woolsey, former Attorney generalMichael Mukasey, and former Senator Dennis DeConcini, is based on a thorough knowledge of the case. Codevilla concluded, "having been intimately acquainted with the materials that Pollard passed and with the 'sources and methods' by which they were gathered, I would be willing to give expert testimony that Pollard is guilty of neither more nor less than what the indictment alleges."
In a contemporaneous interview with The Weekly Standard, Codevilla said that, "The story of the Pollard case is a blot on American justice", and that the life sentence "makes you ashamed to be an American."[10][11][12][13][14]
Codevilla, Angelo M. (1988). The Cure that may Kill: Unintended Consequences of the INF Treaty. London: Alliance for the Institute for European Defence & Strategic Studies. ISBN0907967930. LCCN90108095.
Codevilla, Angelo M. (1988). While Others Build: The Commonsense Approach to the Strategic Defense Initiative. New York: Free Press. ISBN0029056713. LCCN87035661.
Codevilla, Angelo M. (2000). Between the Alps and a Hard place: Switzerland in World War II and Moral Blackmail Today. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing. ISBN089526353X. LCCN00040308.
Codevilla, Angelo M. (2006). Seriousness and Character: The Intellectual History of American Foreign Policy (1st ed.). Yale University Press. ISBN978-0300108507.
Codevilla, Angelo M. (2009). The Character of Nations: How Politics Makes and Breaks Prosperity, Family, and Civility (Rev. ed.). New York: Basic Books. ISBN9780465028009. LCCN2009000660.
Codevilla, Angelo M. (2014). To Make and Keep Peace Among Ourselves and with All Nations. Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press. ISBN9780817917142.
^Rosen, Stephen (July 1, 1988). "While Others Build: The Common-Sense Approach to the Strategic Defense Initiative, by Angelo Codevilla (Anti-Missile Defense)". Commentary.
Book review of While Others Build: The Common-sense Approach to the Strategic Defense Initiative.