Odierno was commissioned as an officer upon his graduation from West Point in 1976. Over his career, he was stationed in
Germany, Saudi Arabia,
the Balkans, and the US.
Iraq War Odierno served three
tours in Iraq between 2003 and 2010. He commanded the
4th Infantry Division during the
2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, with headquarters at
Tikrit. According to
Thomas E. Ricks, the Division employed aggressive tactics under his leadership; according to a 2008 profile of Odierno in
The Guardian, the Division followed an "iron-fist strategy" under his command. Odierno replaced
Peter W. Chiarelli as commander of
Multi-National Corps – Iraq in 2006. As commander, Odierno promoted the
Iraq War troop surge of 2007 as an alternative to the then-prevailing military strategy. His tactics as commander were less "confrontational" than those he had employed as commander of the 4th Infantry Division. In September 2008, Odierno took over from
David Petraeus as commander of US forces in Iraq. According to then-Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates, Odierno's experience as commander during the surge suited him to succeed Petraeus.
Army leadership John M. McHugh at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, 7 September 2011. On 30 May 2011, Odierno was nominated to be
Army Chief of Staff. He was confirmed to take over from General
Martin E. Dempsey on 7 September 2011, and sworn in as 38th
Army chief of staff later that day. In 2014, Odierno submitted a budget request for 520,000 active-duty soldiers, and said that the bare minimum was 450,000, which would, however, be at a "high risk to meet one major war". As chief of staff, Odierno said in a 2015 interview with
The Daily Telegraph that he was "very concerned" about a decline in the United Kingdom's military spending. In August 2015, Odierno retired from the Army after 39 years of service.
Post-military activities In January 2017, Odierno was named chairman of
USA Football, a national organization that promotes youth football. He was named chairman and alternate governor of the
National Hockey League's
Florida Panthers on 12 October 2017. In July 2021, he was selected as a member of the board of trustees at
North Carolina State University. ==Assignments==