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Balkan Failure is Clark's (Building anti-American anger) (May 1999)
Chicago-Sun Times ^
| May 6, 1999
| Robert Novak
Posted on 01/25/2004 4:54:47 PM PST by XHogPilot
Balkan failure is Clark's
Who is responsible for an air offensive that is building anti-American anger across Europe without breaking the Serbian regime's will? The blame rests heavily on Gen. Wesley Clark, the NATO supreme commander.
After 40 days, U.S.-dominated NATO air strikes no longer even pretend to aim solely at military targets. Pentagon sources admit that the attacks on the city center of Belgrade are intended to so demoralize ordinary citizens that they force President Slobodan Milosevic to yield. That has not yet happened, but diplomats believe the grave damage done to American prestige in Central and Eastern Europe will outlive this vicious little war.
"The problem is Wes Clark making--at least approving--the bombing decisions," said one such diplomat, who then asked rhetorically: "How could they let a man with such a lack of judgment be [supreme allied commander of Europe]?" Through dealings with Yugoslavia that date back to 1994, Clark's propensity for mistakes has kept him in trouble while he continued moving up the chain of command thanks to a patron in the Oval Office.
In the last month's American newspaper clippings, Clark emerges as the only heroic figure of a non-heroic war. Indeed, his resume is stirring: first in his class at West Point, Rhodes scholar, frequently wounded and highly decorated Vietnam combat veteran, White House fellow. He became a full general about as fast as possible in peacetime.
But members of Congress who visited Clark at his Brussels headquarters in the early days of the attack on Yugoslavia were startled by his off-the-record comments. If the Russians are going to sail war ships into the combat zone, we should bomb them. If Milosevic is getting oil from the Hungarian pipeline, we should bomb it.
NATO's actual air strategy did not go that far, but increasingly, it has reflected Clark's belligerence. Even the general's defenders in the national security establishment cannot understand the targeting of empty government buildings in Belgrade, including Milosevic's official residence. Civilian damage and casualties in Kosovo and elsewhere in Serbia are too widespread to be accidental.
Sources inside the U.S. high command say this week's disabling of Belgrade electrical power facilities was intended to destroy civilian morale. The Pentagon has announced NATO "area bombing" with "dumb" bombs carried by B-52s--clearly an anti-population tactic. In a highly limited war, Clark is using the methods of total war.
One American diplomat with experience in the Balkans, who asked that he not be quoted by name, told me that ground forces are needed and he is appalled by the bombing of civilian targets. "It has no military significance, and it is pointless--utterly pointless," he added. "But it has a terrible impact on us. This bombing in the heart of the Balkans is costing us."
That cost is viewed by State Department professionals as the product of Clark's deaf ear when it comes to diplomacy. His classic gaffe came in 1994 when he went off to meet Ratko Mladic, the brutal Bosnian Serb commander now sought as a war criminal, at his redoubt in Banja Luka. Mladic concluded their meeting by saying how much he admired Clark's three-star general cap. Impulsively, the American general exchanged hats with the notorious commander, who has been accused of ethnic cleansing, and even accepted Mladic's service revolver with an engraved message.
That escapade cost Victor Jackovich his job as U.S. ambassador to Bosnia. He was sacked partly for not exercising sufficient restraint on the mercurial Clark and for not preventing him from gallivanting off to Banja Luka. The sequel came at Belgrade a year later during the diplomacy leading to the Dayton peace conference. Milosevic, smiling broadly, humiliated Clark by returning his hat to him. That helps explain the general's intense personal animosity for the Yugoslav president.
Clark is the perfect model of a 1990s political four-star general. Clark's rapid promotions after Dayton--winning his fourth star to head the Panama-based Southern Command and then the jewel of his European post--were both opposed by the Pentagon brass. But Clark's fellow Arkansan in the White House named him anyway. The president and the general are collaborators in a failed strategy whose consequences cast a long shadow even if soon terminated by negotiation.
TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: New Hampshire
KEYWORDS: 2004; balkan; balkand; clark; kosovo; miserablefailure; nato; nh; novak; wesleyclark
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To: gatorbait
Idiot Clark almost started World War III with the Russians -- a smarter British commander prevented it.
Here is an article detailing it:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/671495.stm Thursday, 9 March, 2000, 14:14 GMT
Confrontation over Pristina airport
Nato was taken aback by the Russians' arrival
Details of Russia's surprise occupation of Pristina airport at the end of the Kosovo war are revealed in a new BBC documentary on the conflict.
For the first time, the key players in the tense confrontation between Nato and Russian troops talk about the stand-off which jeopardised the entire peacekeeping mission.
The Russians, who played a crucial role in persuading Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to end the war, had expected to police their own sector of Kosovo, independent of Nato.
When they did not get it, they felt double-crossed.
As Nato's K-For peacekeepers prepared to enter the province on 12 June, they discovered the Russians had got there first.
A contingent of 200 troops, stationed in Bosnia, was already rolling towards Pristina airport.
'Third World War'
General Wesley Clark, Nato's supreme commander, immediately ordered 500 British and French paratroopers to be put on standby to occupy the airport.
''I called the [Nato] Secretary General [Javier Solana] and told him what the circumstances were,'' General Clark tells the BBC programme Moral Combat: Nato at War.
''He talked about what the risks were and what might happen if the Russian's got there first, and he said: 'Of course you have to get to the airport'.
General Jackson: Backed by UK Government
''I said: 'Do you consider I have the authority to do so?' He said: 'Of course you do, you have transfer of authority'.''
But General Clark's plan was blocked by General Sir Mike Jackson, K-For's British commander.
"I'm not going to start the Third World War for you," he reportedly told General Clark during one heated exchange.
General Jackson tells the BBC: ''We were [looking at] a possibility....of confrontation with the Russian contingent which seemed to me probably not the right way to start off a relationship with Russians who were going to become part of my command.''
Russian plans
The Russian advance party took the airport unopposed. The world watched nervously.
A senior Russian officer, General Leonid Ivashev, tells the BBC how the Russians had plans to fly in thousands of troops.
''Let's just say that we had several airbases ready. We had battalions of paratroopers ready to leave within two hours,'' he said.
Amid fears that Russian aircraft were heading for Pristina, General Clark planned to order British tanks and armoured cars to block the runways to prevent any transport planes from landing.
General Clark said he believed it was ''an appropriate course of action''. But the plan was again vetoed by Britain.
Partition fears
Instead, he asked neighbouring countries, including Hungary and Romania not to allow Russian aircraft to overfly their territory.
Russians are not under direct Nato command
During the stand-off, Moscow insisted its troops would be answerable only to its own commanders.
Nato refused to accept this, predicting it would lead to the partition of Kosovo into an ethnic Albanian south and a Serbian north.
A deal on the deployment of Russian peacekeepers was reached in early July.
The Russians now operate as part of K-For in sectors controlled by Nato states, but are not directly under Nato's command.
To: Dog Gone
Many of us think that he has a strange"look".
42
posted on
01/25/2004 7:12:03 PM PST
by
MEG33
To: PhiKapMom
But members of Congress who visited Clark at his Brussels headquarters in the early days of the attack on Yugoslavia were startled by his off-the-record comments. If the Russians are going to sail war ships into the combat zone, we should bomb them. If Milosevic is getting oil from the Hungarian pipeline, we should bomb it. HOLY COW!
BTW .. wasn't it this war that the China Embassy was hit and a number of people were killed?
43
posted on
01/25/2004 7:14:09 PM PST
by
Mo1
(Join the dollar a day crowd now!)
To: river rat
I should not have laughed..I laughed.LOL
44
posted on
01/25/2004 7:14:30 PM PST
by
MEG33
To: gatorbait
Thanks for the ping. Was there even a pressing need to engage in that war in fhe first place? I know Clinton said something about "the children of Europe" in justifying this war.
45
posted on
01/25/2004 7:25:30 PM PST
by
Tolerance Sucks Rocks
(Death is certain; little chance of success; what are we waiting for???)
To: Mo1
This was the war -- said they were using maps that were out of date and in the process the Chinese Embassy was bombed.
It was also the war where one of the people (Civilian with a British accent) said at the NATO Briefing (I wish I could remember who it was) that the Stealth Fighter had properties that made it invisible to the naked eye. I can remember sitting in my family room laughing. It is virtually invisible to radar but any person can see the plane. Believe it was Shea with a General standing next to him -- just not for sure but the briefer had a British accent and the general was American. Wish I knew if it was Clark or not.
46
posted on
01/25/2004 7:29:32 PM PST
by
PhiKapMom
(AOII Mom -- Support Bush-Cheney '04)
To: PhiKapMom
Oh wow .. I can picture the face, but I can't think of his name
You know this is going to drive me nuts now .. guess I need to google some more *L*
47
posted on
01/25/2004 7:33:01 PM PST
by
Mo1
(Join the dollar a day crowd now!)
To: annyokie
You and me both are totally disgusted with those two lowlifes now using their time in the military. Another thing -- Clark's wife wouldn't let him go to work for a defense contractor that built weapon systems. That spoke volumes to me.
Kerry is nothing more than a traitor in my book for what he did against our military that was still in Vietnam with his leading the Veterans against the War movement that prolonged the war because the Viet Cong thought if they held out long enough, America would lose resolve to fight. You know what -- they were right thanks to the likes of Kerry, Fonda, and Ramsey and a host of others who forgot we had men fighting and dying in a foreign country.
48
posted on
01/25/2004 7:35:26 PM PST
by
PhiKapMom
(AOII Mom -- Support Bush-Cheney '04)
To: XHogPilot
Excellent repost.
Well worth going back sometimes.
To: Mo1
I know the feeling!
50
posted on
01/25/2004 7:36:50 PM PST
by
PhiKapMom
(AOII Mom -- Support Bush-Cheney '04)
To: Idaho5412
((ping))
To: PhiKapMom; XHogPilot
Thanks for the post and the ping. I'm making a file of all the dreadful truths about these RAT candidates.
52
posted on
01/25/2004 7:52:32 PM PST
by
Brasil
("The advance of freedom leads to peace." GWB)
To: Salamander
FYI
53
posted on
01/25/2004 7:59:48 PM PST
by
MEG33
To: Brasil
I cannot believe how much negative it out there about the RAT candidates as I have been researching Kerry and now this comes up about Clark!
54
posted on
01/25/2004 8:12:37 PM PST
by
PhiKapMom
(AOII Mom -- Support Bush-Cheney '04)
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Was there even a pressing need to engage in that war in fhe first place
Only to get indictments off the front page..My pleasure, man.Thought you'd enjoy it.
55
posted on
01/25/2004 8:24:16 PM PST
by
gatorbait
(Yesterday, today and tomorrow......The United States Army)
To: FairOpinion
Ashley Wilkes Clark, military genius and fruitcake oster girl.
Man, what a glorious leader !
56
posted on
01/25/2004 8:27:23 PM PST
by
gatorbait
(Yesterday, today and tomorrow......The United States Army)
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
There was no rationale for our involvement in the Balkans. No vital American interest was at stake. This wasn't our fight. It still isn't. Consequently, what troops we have over there should be pulled out and redeployed to sites reconcilable with national security priorities.
To: PhiKapMom
Wow. A real maniac alright !
58
posted on
01/26/2004 2:28:37 AM PST
by
MeekOneGOP
(Check out this HILARIOUS story !! haha!: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1060580/posts)
To: XHogPilot
Bingo X! Great find indeed! Having seen the little PPP general bristle at hard questions, the word mercurial fits him like a tailor made suit. His record does not bode well nor does his future.
59
posted on
01/26/2004 4:09:47 AM PST
by
yoe
(Join STOP Hillary PAC.com 2111 Wilson Blvd #700, Arlington, VA 22201)
To: PhiKapMom
"Through dealings with Yugoslavia that date back to 1994, Clark's propensity for mistakes has kept him in trouble while he continued moving up the chain of command thanks to a patron in the Oval Office."&
"Clark is the perfect model of a 1990s political four-star general. Clark's rapid promotions after Dayton--winning his fourth star to head the Panama-based Southern Command and then the jewel of his European post--were both opposed by the Pentagon brass. But Clark's fellow Arkansan in the White House named him anyway. The president [Clinoccio] and the general are collaborators in a failed strategy whose consequences cast a long shadow even if soon terminated by negotiation."
During Clintigula's 8 year reign, most self respecting officers & EMs who could retire were retiring/ETS'g due to their distaste for the Liberal-Socialist CIC.
But not this guy.
No, such a sad development apparently was percieved as an "opportunity knocking" by a sorry opportunist.
...such as this Liberal-Socialist presidential wannabe.
60
posted on
01/26/2004 6:32:17 AM PST
by
Landru
(Tagline Schmagline...)
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