For a brief period of time, I had the honor of serving under General Raymond T. Odierno in Iraq. He was, without question, one of the finest officers I ever worked for—sharp, grounded, and with a great sense of humor that managed to shine through even in the worst of times. He was also hard to miss—towering in stature, both physically and professionally—and a proud graduate of West Point’s Class of 1976. I was only a year old when he graduated from the Academy, yet decades later I’d find myself in a war zone serving under his command.
I’ll admit, there was a time when one of his statements got under my skin. General Odierno once said, “We don’t need more M1 tanks.” As a young officer who grew up believing armored warfare was the backbone of modern combat, that rubbed me the wrong way. The M1 Abrams was sacred steel—a symbol of American power. The idea that we didn’t need more of them felt almost sacrilegious.
But with the benefit of time—and watching the tragic lessons unfold in Ukraine—I can now say he was right. When a $300 drone can take out an $8 million tank, the math doesn’t lie. Warfare has changed. The generals who understood that early on were thinking ahead, not backward. Odierno wasn’t anti-tank; he was anti-waste. He understood that technology, doctrine, and strategy evolve faster than the defense industry’s profit margins.
And that brings me to another general—Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler, who famously wrote War Is a Racket. Butler was right, too. Politicians and contractors love M1 tanks. They create jobs, they generate contracts, they pad campaign coffers. Whether we need them or not seems secondary to whether they can be produced and sold. So here we are, decades later, still cranking out 1970s technology, painting it new colors, and shipping it around the world as if it’s the apex of warfare.
Odierno saw past that. He understood that real readiness isn’t about polishing old tools—it’s about preparing for new fights. I may not have seen it then, but I do now.
Rest easy, General. You were right—again.
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