Regrets? Even Brent Scowcroft had a few

Regrets? Even Brent Scowcroft had a few

In a Miller Center oral history released after his death, the former national security advisor revealed some failures

Read the full article at The New York Times

By the time he died last week at age 95, Brent Scowcroft had helped steer the nation through some of the most pivotal events of the modern era. As the much-admired national security adviser to two presidents, he became known as the archetype of a foreign policy steward, the model his successors vowed to emulate, though never as successfully.

But that does not mean that it was smooth or easy. And it does not mean that Mr. Scowcroft always got his way. In a revealing 20-year-old secret oral history released after his death, the man who did so much to define America’s place in the world in the last decades of the 20th century openly discussed the times he failed to define America’s policy around the world.

Among other things, Mr. Scowcroft said he tried to fire Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, the swaggering, larger-than-life officer who was leading American forces against Iraq, and later tried to rescind a decision that enabled Saddam Hussein to deploy armed helicopters against his own people. He said he wished they had prolonged the war to destroy more Iraqi forces. He also wanted to use force to intervene in the bloodletting in Yugoslavia and opposed pardons for Iran-contra figures.

Read the full article at The New York Times