Posted on 03/26/2004 10:03:04 PM PST by GulliverSwift
If you want the real book on Richard Clarkeminus the Bush-administration attacks and Clarkes self-promotionread Ghost Wars, Steve Colls new book on the CIA in Afghanistan.
His enemies regarded him as not only mean, but dangerous, writes Coll, managing editor of the Washington Post. So palpably did he thrive on an air of sinister mystery, Coll writes, that Clarke chose Oliver Norths old White House office.
Coll is not the first journalist to detect and use Clarkes knowledge of the sinister and mysterious. While Clarke was White House terrorism czar, he often showed up in news dispatches as an unnamed source. Interviews with reporters on the terrorism beat suggest that Clarke has always been savvy in using the press.
He was known to be a source for a select group of journalists, says one print reporter.
Adds a TV reporter: There were periods when he was available and periods when he went underground.
Clarke was mentioned by name in nearly 1,000 stories over the years, and he was the unnamed source for many more. Fox News reporter Jim Angle this week outed Clarke as the source of a White House background interview.
Over the years hes been in contact with a lot of journalists in town, says Coll in an interview on Friday. Coll himself spent many hours with Clarke.
Clarkes history with journalists does not bode well for his detractors in the Bush White House. As they try to discredit Clarke, they are running into journalists who have known him for years. Most reporters came away trusting Clarke.
Credible? asked one reporter. I think he is.
Coll portrays Clarke as a gruff bureaucratic infighter who did his best to fight terrorism before terrorism was thought to be a real threat.
Colls 695-page tome has set the stage for Clarkes own bookAgainst All Enemiesand his explosive testimony before the September 11 panel, in which he contended the Bush administration ignored his pleas to combat terrorism before 9/11.
Clarke revels in public theater, Coll said in an interview. A hearing, in the middle of a presidential campaignhe loved it.
Coll describes Clarke as a shadowy member of Washingtons permanent intelligence and bureaucratic classes . . . who seemed to wield enormous power precisely because hardly anyone knew who he was or what exactly he did for a living.
Coll writes that Clarke sometimes acted as a freelance power broker and trickster abroad. When he was at the State Department, investigators concluded that Clarke had usurped his superiors, turning himself into a one-man foreign policy czar and arms-trafficking shop.
Clarke worked his way up to become President Clintons terrorism czar in 1998, where he began his crusade: Clarke declared that America faced a new era of terrorist threats for which it was woefully unprepared.
In an interview, Coll says Clarkes status was extraordinary: Hes an amazing figure in that way. He rose effectively to Cabinet rank.
From that job, Clarke put Osama bin Laden in his crosshairs and sometimes pushed harder for action on bin Laden than the CIAs own officers recommended.
When the Bush administration took over in 2001 and decided to reduce Clarkes power, Coll writes what Clarke this week told the 9/11 committee: He tried to warn Bush officials that terrorism was a major threat, but they ignored his pleas.
Now that both books are on the stands and Clarke is on TV, Coll has become a reservoir of information for Post reporters looking for guidance on Clarke. Given Colls respect for Clarke, its fair to assume that he will get fair if not favorable coverage from the Post.
Coll did come away from watching Clarkes testimony with one question: Its a mystery why he chose to deliver the force of his moment so explicitly against the Bush administration, he says in an interview. Clintons people were involved as well.
Some would even call it a sinister mystery.
It's a long road to November 2nd. He'll run a good campaign, imho ...
How I wish I could believe that.
Perhaps Ijaz will answer that MOST pertinent question, when he gets a shot at the Commission.
I was truly irked then. It seems that way all the time with libs - they make some idiotic statement and then will not stick around to defend the statement. And this from a woman with two degrees!
There's a 'Clarke' in every industry. In some circles this is known as the 'indepensible man'. The company just can't run without him....he sees the big picture....he's been there for years and knows lots of little tantalizing tidbits. He is also not trusted with some pertinent information because he breaks one rule: HE CAN'T KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT.
Sometimes, if the price is right, "stingers" turn tail and swarm their handlers.
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