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The Secret History of Gen. Alexander Haig

Editor’s Note: Republished from Truthout.org with the express permission of Mel Goodman, whose bio is at the end of this post.


Alexander Haig. (Photo: Tom Ordelman)

The obituaries in the mainstream media failed to capture the full extent of the controversy and confrontation that marked Gen. Alexander M. Haig’s political career in the White House during the Nixon administration and the State Department during the Reagan administration. In his memoir, Henry A. Kissinger praised Haig’s role in 1973-1974 in "holding the government together" in the final days of the Nixon era. Kissinger was respectful of Haig because the general allowed the national security adviser to do as he pleased in his stewardship of foreign and national security policy.

Haig’s hands-off attitude allowed Kissinger to unnecessarily and dangerously raise the nuclear alert status to Defense Condition III for the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis in an effort to deter the Soviets from any military intervention in the last days of the October War of 1973. But there was no Soviet intention to intervene, and our European allies – let alone Moscow – were particularly upset with the nuclear alert. Several of our NATO allies, including Germany, Spain and Italy, limited US access to their bases as a result of DefCon-III. Neither Haig nor Kissinger ever explained their rationale for the heightened nuclear alert – although they promised to do so.

Gen. Haig never should have permitted Kissinger to chair a meeting of the National Security Council, let alone raise the nuclear alert status, without the presence of President Richard M. Nixon, who was indisposed at the time. The National Security Act of 1947 makes it clear that only the president or the vice president must run such a meeting or the president must issue a written authorization to make it clear who is going to run the meeting. The United States had no vice president at the time because Spiro Agnew had been forced to resign and Gerald Ford had not been confirmed. The meeting was held shortly before midnight on October 24, and Haig refused to awaken the sleeping president. The decision of Haig and Kissinger was reckless and could have had grave consequences.

Haig was a major player in the US failure to understand the role of international terrorism and to falsely blame the Soviet Union for the orchestration of terrorism. As the new secretary of state, Haig arrived at the State Department with strong anti-Soviet baggage, based in part on his belief that the Soviet Union was a primary source of support for international terrorism. There had been an attempt to assassinate Haig in Europe in June 1979, only four days before he stepped down as Supreme Allied Commander for Europe. The Soviets had nothing to do with the assassination attempt, but in his confirmation hearings on January 14, 1981, Haig charged the Soviets with orchestrating the attempt. On that same day, the Senate confirmed William Casey as director of the CIA by a vote of 95 to 0. From that point forward, Haig and Casey led an effort to portray Moscow as orchestrating terrorism "like a giant Wurlitzer organ."

Haig and Casey immediately conspired to produce a National Intelligence Estimate on international terrorism, knowing that they had a high-level supporter for their views, the incoming president, Ronald Reagan. Reagan’s campaign oratory against the Soviets regularly referred to "Soviet-trained terrorists who are bringing civil war to Central America," requiring a "stand against terrorism in the world." Haig and Casey believed that CIA political analysis was naive and unsophisticated, and wanted an estimate on terrorism for key policy-makers to demonstrate that a new era had begun at the CIA. The new National Intelligence Officer for the Soviet Union, Robert Gates, immediately became an advocate for Casey’s hard-line views, serving as Casey’s special assistant, deputy director for intelligence and deputy for central intelligence.

A senior intelligence official, the late Richard Lehman, who facetiously referred to policy-makers as "our masters," told a group of us responsible for the estimate that Casey and Haig have to be "let down, and that it is our job to let them down easily." We were well aware of the difficult bureaucratic task we faced, but we were also aware that there was no good evidence of Soviet support for international terrorism in Western Europe and the Middle East. What we didn’t know was that Haig and Casey had read Claire Sterling’s polemic on terrorism, "The Terror Network," and that no amount of factual information would disabuse them of their notions about Moscow and terror. Haig immediately appointed Michael Ledeen to his staff; Ledeen was Sterling’s collaborator on "The Terror Network." Haig, Casey and Gates used the accusations of Soviet responsibility for terrorism to block any possibility of improved relations with the Soviet Union. Fortunately, Haig’s successor, George Shultz, ignored these accusations.

The obituaries pointed out that President Ronald Reagan’s acceptance of Haig’s offer to resign his post as secretary of state was a shock to the general, but they failed to note the reason for Reagan’s acceptance. In his memoir, "Caveat: Realism, Reagan, and Foreign Policy," Haig claims that the United States sent the "strongest possible warnings" to Israel not to launch its war against Lebanon in 1982. There were no US warnings. In fact, Haig was one of a very few members of the Reagan administration to understand that the Israeli offensive was going to reach Beirut, the Lebanese capital, in violation of Israeli intentions not to threaten Arab capitals. As secretary of state, Haig was in a position to warn the Israelis against such a disastrous military adventure and its obvious consequences, but chose not to do so. Instead of issuing a "red light" against such a campaign, Haig merely issued a "yellow light" of caution regarding the clandestine arrangements between the Israelis and the Lebanese Maronite leaders. These arrangements led to the bloody conquest of Beirut, byzantine political alliances between Lebanese factions, the frustration and tragedy of the US Marine occupation, the Palestinian massacres at the Sabra and Shatila camps and the formation of Hezbollah. Lebanon has had no stability for the past three decades, and Israel continues to have a security problem on its northern frontier.

Haig’s role in all of these events – DefCon-III; the handling of international terrorism; and the Israeli invasion of Lebanon – had unintended consequences that harmed the interests of the United States and delayed the process of diplomacy and negotiation. Like many of the neoconservatives who dominated the administration of President George W. Bush, Haig placed too much reliance on the use and threat of military force and relegated diplomacy to a back burner. This militarization of American national security and foreign policies has harmed US interests and raised the hidden costs of US involvement in the Cold War.

—————————————————–


Melvin A. Goodman, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University, spent 42 years with the CIA, the National War College, and the U.S. Army. His latest book is Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA. [This story originally appeared at Truthout.org.]

  • Diana L. C.

    Mr. Goodman,

    Thank your for this excellent post on Haig.  I do remember him well, but only as a lowly citizen could know him from reading about him in the news and watching television news.  I have no good memories of the Nixon, Agnew, Haig political era.  I know we are supposed to praise Nixon and Kissinger for the China thing, but at this point–with China basically owning us–I am not sure that is something I want to do.

    I would love to read your opinions about Kissinger and China.

    It always makes me so angry when the news media dismisses too lightly the negative history of a political figure who just died.  It did when Reagan died and the news media tried to make him into some type of American god, as if we were the Roman empire putting our caesars through some sort of apotheosis process.   
    “I want the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.”

  • arabella trefoil

    Thank you for this insightful and important post. When I read Haig’s obituaries, all I could remember is how frightening the time was when Haig was covering up for Nixon in 1974. I remember Kissinger’s raising the nuclear threat level to DefCon III. It was an unbelievably frightening time. Perhaps hindsight makes it seem less so, because now we now how everybody’s story ended.

    But I remember Haig’s period as one of the most frightening times in my life, comparable only to NY in the days following 9/11, and to Cuban Missile crisis in 1962. I was ten years old at the time of the Cuban Missile crisis. Those were the “duck and cover” times at school. But even as a small child I knew that hiding under a desk was not going to save me if the nukes were unlaunched.

    Haig brought that fear back into my life not only during Nixon’s time, but in 1981 when he said “I am in charge.”

    When he ran for president in 1988, I thought “This guy is like shit on shoe. I wonder if I’ll outlive him or if he’ll dog me the rest of my days. Or maybe we’ll both die at the same time in a nuclear holocaust.”

    His obituaries praise Haig for “holding the country together” during the Watergate scandal. I am astounded that anybody could forget what a creepy person he was. How people can write about this man without talking about the fear he created is beyond me. In my imagination, he’s such an over-large person that I can’t believe he’s dead.

  • jbjd

    For me, the Nobel Peace Prize lost its luster once it was awarded to Henry Kissinger.  (As for the rest of the story, I guess we only have to take your word for it.)

  • mountainaires

    Thank you so very much for your insights and history! I always love to see your blog posts. 

  • Guest-also

    Haig also mishandled terribly the Malvinas/Falklands escalation prior to the war. He made the crazy and drunk military dictator Galtieri in Argentina believe that the US would not take sides or intervene if he -Galtieri- invaded Malvinas/Falklands hence almost daring him to do so… Haigdidn’t do anything there either…

  • Anonymous

    Gee, did he do anything right?  

  • arabella trefoil

    Nothing comes to mind.

  • Ferd Berfle

    I didn’t think much of Haig when I served in USAREUR and he was commander of NATO. He was more like a bantam rooster and politician than a real military leader. Just another Dick Cheney/Rumsfeld sort of blusterer.

  • EllenD

    Interesting that he didn’t wake Nixon who was “indisposed”. What does “indisposed” mean ? Dead drunk?

  • Pingback: Alexander Haig Online | Worldwide News

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    The bright side to this? We made it through that era in one piece! And if you think that Haig and the 70′s were a scary time? You better wake up and look out the window!

    Its Back to The Future Part IV! Will the real terrorist please stand up?

  • mary2

    Excellent analysis of the deleterious effects of Haig’s defense myopia.  But the real villain in all this is none other than Henry Kissinger who has posed the greatest threat to the peace and security of the world through his murderous, extreme policies that have seen the slaughter of millions of innocents in all continents.

    Evil cannot be understood without analyzing Kissinger’s mistaken dominoes effect policy he was allowed to practice under Nixon and then without much oversight during Ford administration.  South American military dictatorships and overthrows of democratically elected governments throughout the world sprung up thanks to Mr. Kissinger–rearded by 3/4 of the world’s press as a “murderer”.

    Chile’s own sociopathic Pinochet was instaled by Kissinger’s ordering the CIA to overthrow and destroy the democratically elected Allende government in Chile in l973.  And,  thanks to Kissinger, thousands of students were slaughtered and innocent civilians arrested and tortured in the 70s–thanks to the murderous, sociopathic policies of Henry KISSINGER or “MURDERER Kissinger” as he is known throughout the free press. 

    In l974 Kissinger  engineered the TURKISH MUSLIM INVASION OF CYPRUS where thousands of women were RAPED and maimed by the Turkish army that still occupies this beautiful island of Venus. This caused the mass deportation from the northern (richer) part of Cyprus of all its Greek Orthodox Christian population to alllow the Turkish army to reproduce sufficiently to alter genetically the population.
    Thanks to Kissinger, the island is still occupied by turkish hordes..

    Many are the political sins of Mr. Kissiner.  But his lack of political insights and humanity were not his only problem.
    I doubt, however, that this man so beloved by republicans and extremists,has conscience to not sleep well at night because of the millions that were sacrificed for his extremist, misguided policies.

    To think that this high-powered assasin makes $100,000 per speech is unfathomable….He should have been tried with Pinochet…

  • mary2

    I forgot to congratulate Obama for winning the Nobel Peace Prize.  He is in good company with yet another sociopathic, useless and dangerous incompetent—Kissinger!

    The Nobel Prize was started by Alfred Nobel–who made billions in ammunition factories and selling supplies to warring factions….figures!

  • Mr.Murder

    Haig did note that Nuns ”exchanged fire” with mercs we were advising in Central America.

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