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Wesley Clark: A Clinton by Another Name? (GREAT ANTI-CLARK ARTICLE w/ AMMO)
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | September 17, 2003 | Lowell Ponte

Posted on 09/17/2003 8:12:48 AM PDT by jmstein7

THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY HAS “TWO STARS,” Senator Hillary Clinton of New York and retired four-star General Wesley Clark. This is what former President Bill Clinton, according to the New York Times, told a gathering of big campaign donors in Chappaqua in early September.

General Clark now says he will announce his candidacy for President near his home in Little Rock, Arkansas, on Wednesday, September 17. At his side, reports Fox News Channel, will be the co-chair of his campaign, former First Lady of Arkansas and the United States Hillary Clinton, although the Clark campaign now says they may have “misunderstood” the freshman senator from New York..

These “two stars” could become the 2004 Democratic “dream ticket,” if they can agree who should be on top and who on the bottom. Both were born in Illinois and moved to Arkansas, but their star-crossed paths would be very different.

Hillary Clinton began as a “Goldwater Girl” who at first followed her father’s Republican inclinations. The 1960s at Wellesley College and Yale Law School radicalized her. Hillary Rodham became an activist supporter of the Black Panthers, a law intern in the office of the attorneys for the Communist Party USA, and the young bride of an aspiring politician in the one-party Democratic State of Arkansas.

Wesley Clark was taken to Arkansas at age five after the death of his father. He would attend West Point, graduating first in his class in 1966. He then attended Oxford University in England as a Rhodes Scholar, like Bill Clinton. But where Clinton womanized and led anti-war demonstrations in Europe against the United States, Clark studied and earned a Masters Degree.

While America was rocked by anti-war and anti-military demonstrations during the 1960s, Clark served in Vietnam, where he was wounded in combat and earned both Bronze and Silver Stars. His military career bridges 34 years, including service as commander of all U.S. forces in Latin America and NATO Europe, as well as command of the Serbia-Kosovo conflict.

In keeping with the apolitical traditions of our military, Clark, 58, did not decide he was, or register as, a member of the Democratic Party until August 2003.

But analysts calculate that the moment he announces his candidacy, Clark will rank among the top five out of 10 prominent Democrats seeking the Presidency. A Southerner, he will vault past Senators such as Bob Graham of Florida and John Edwards of North Carolina, both of whom will thus see their hopes of being the traditional Southern “ticket-balancers” for northern candidates dashed.

If Clark enters the race, a USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll found, he would likely immediately peel off two points from the 15 percent of Rep. Dick Gephardt (D-MO), two points from the 13 of former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, one point from the 12 of Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) and three points from the 11 percent support of Senator John Forbes Kerry (D-MA), the one other Democrat running as a decorated Vietnam War veteran. This would deflate more than a quarter of Kerry’s support, dealing what could be a fatal blow to his flagging campaign. Clark would enter the race with nine percent support.

“I’ve got some heavy artillery that can come in. I’ve got good logistics, and I’ve got strategic mobility,” said Clark to Newsweek Magazine, using metaphors sure to appeal to antiwar peacenik Democrats.

In fact he does appear to be supported by much of the Clintons’ political war machine. Among those flocking to his campaign are Clinton veteran gutter fighters Mark Fabiani, Bruce Lindsey, Bill Oldaker, Vanessa Weaver, George Bruno, Skip Rutherford, Peter Knight, Ron Klain and perhaps even former Clinton deputy chief of staff Harold Ickes, among others.

The Clintons’ sock puppet installed by them to head the Democratic National Committee, Terry McAuliffe, had already ordered an extra podium for General Clark for the scheduled September 25 New York City debate among Democratic presidential aspirants.

In addition to Hillary as his campaign co-chair, the General’s Draft Clark for President 2004 organization reportedly already has 166 professional coordinators in all 50 states.

The Clinton “orchestration” behind Clark’s campaign is so apparent that commentators are already speculating whether General Clark is running for himself – or as a stalking horse for Hillary and/or as a puppet for Bill. Is all this being arranged to knock down rivals and clear the way for a Clinton-Clark “C-C Rider” ticket in 2004?

The Achilles Heel for Democrats has been their widely-perceived weakness on national defense and national security issues. President Bill Clinton tried to remedy this with strange military interventions, from Haiti to Kosovo. (He likewise tried to remedy the Democrats’ perceived soft-on-crime image with his symbolic “100,000 cops” campaign and support for the death penalty.)

Having a General Wesley Clark on the 2004 ticket to cover Democratic shortcomings could help conceal this weakness. Indeed, hardcore Lefties such as Michael Moore become almost orgasmic when they envision a debate between General Clark and Texas Air National Guard veteran President George W. Bush. “I know,” writes Moore, “who the winner is going to be.”

But those like Moore might be going off half-cocked with such enthusiasm for a host of reasons.

As this column documented almost three weeks ago, General Wesley Clark “is a very peculiar man with facets to his personality, behavior and history that will seem creepy and frightening to people of both the Right and Left. To know him is not to love him.”

While commanding NATO troops in defense of Muslim Kosovo and against Serbian Christians, for example, the hot-headed Clark commanded a subordinate British General to attack Russian troops that had landed without NATO permission at the airport in Kosovo’s capital. (Clark speaks fluent Russian but chose not even to talk with the Russian troops before attacking them.)

The British General Sir Mike Jackson reportedly refused Clark’s risky orders, saying: “I’m not going to start the Third World War for you!”

Others who interviewed Gen. Clark in Kosovo were shocked by his casual talk about how he would launch military strikes against Hungary if it tried to send fuel to the Christian Serbians, or against Russian ships if they entered the war zone.

Gen. Clark in the Balkans also pursued policies that increased civilian casualties, such as deliberate bombing from high altitude and his policy to cut off fuel, food and energy from the civilians of Belgrade in wintertime. Clark also cozied up to at least one man accused of war crimes and ethnic cleansing, Bosnian commander Ratko Mladic.

“How,” investigative reporter Robert Novak quotes one diplomat as saying of Wesley Clark, “could they let a man with such a lack of judgment be (Supreme Allied Commander of Europe)?”

Do antiwar, peace-activist supporters of Howard Dean really want this kind of twitchy-fingered militarist hot-head a heartbeat away from the nuclear button? Would they really want a Commander-in-Chief Wesley Clark?

Clark’s incompetence, disregard for human life, dishonesty and criticism of Clinton policies cost him his command. President Clinton and Defense Secretary William Cohen removed Clark months ahead of schedule.

But this did not alter the special bond between Clark and the Clintons that began in 1993, and that is evident today in their effort to control his presidential campaign.

What the national media are not telling you, of course, is that General Clark’s ascent to military four-stardom was itself a political act orchestrated by the Clintons.

This might have been motivated by gratitude, an emotion the Clintons scarcely ever feel for those of their servants they routinely betray. More likely it was satisfaction to find a high-ranking military man who would serve them with more loyalty than he showed to his oath or to the Constitution or to the military that the Clintons loathe (and that in turn loathes them).

This was, after all, the Clinton era, in which officers in U.S. Marines commando training were given mysterious questionnaires asking if they would obey a command to shoot American citizens who disobeyed a law that required them to disarm. By a similar method, Communist China selected the elite troops who could be trusted to gun down 1989 student protestors at Tiananmen Square.

In 1993 Wesley Clark, after a solid-but-not-stellar military career, was commanding the 1st Cavalry Division at a sweaty 339-square-mile base in Texas called Fort Hood. On a late winter day his office got a call from Democratic Texas Governor Ann Richards (later defeated and replaced by George W. Bush).

The Governor had an urgent matter to discuss. Crazies about 40 miles north of Fort Hood in Waco, Texas, had killed Federal agents, she said. If newly sworn-in President Bill Clinton signed a waiver setting aside the Posse Commitatus Act, which generally prohibits our military from using its arms against American citizens inside our borders, could Fort Hood supply tanks, men, and equipment to deal with the wackos at Waco?

Wesley Clark’s command at Fort Hood “lent” 17 pieces of armor and 15 active service personnel under his command to the Waco Branch Davidian operation. Whether Clark himself helped direct the assault on the Davidian church using this military force at Waco has not been documented, but it certainly came from his command with his approval.

Eighty-two men, women, children and babies – including two babies “fire aborted” as their mothers’ bodies writhed in the flames of that Clinton holocaust – died from the attack using military equipment from Clark’s command.

“Planning for this final assault involved a meeting between Clinton Attorney General Janet Reno and two military officers,” this column reported, “who developed the tactical plan used but who have never been identified. Some evidence and analysis suggests that Wesley Clark was one of these two who devised what happened at Waco.”

“Clark is more Clinton than Eisenhower,” writes Matthew Continetti of the Weekly Standard. His career advanced via politics, not the battlefield.

After Waco, Clark in April 1994 was promoted to Director of Strategic Plans and Policy for the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon, which meant he could see and consult with the Clintons easily. Soon thereafter he was promoted to Commander of all U.S. Latin American Forces, and a year thereafter to the ultimate title of SACEUR, commander of all the NATO forces in Europe, a position Clark would hold until he retired in May 2000.

Even Clark’s vaunted fourth star as a general was unearned, according to Robert Novak. It was twice rejected as undeserved by Pentagon brass, but then was awarded by his patron Bill Clinton after Clark begged the President for it.

“Clark,” wrote Novak, “is the perfect model of a 1990s political four-star general.” The Clintons love him. The troops he has commanded, by contrast, call him the “Ultimate Perfumed Prince.”

But his promotion to a four-star general, and now to a Presidential candidate, must have involved more than Clark’s slavish obedience to the Clintons and their agenda, and more than his background as a fellow Little Rocker Arkansan. The Clintons, as their use of private detectives and secret police attests, like to use people they can blackmail – people over whom they hold some dark secret as a threat.

Perhaps General Wesley Clark was more intimately and directly involved in the deaths at Waco than anybody has reported. Perhaps he has some other secret shame or disgrace. For whatever reason, the Clintons seem confident that they have him under their complete control.

This megalomaniacal, manipulative couple would not be advancing the candidacy of General Wesley Clark unless they were sure that they control him – and that his candidacy will serve their own selfish interests.

Having read this column, please take a moment to re-read my August 25 previous investigation into General Wesley Clark. Can you imagine any decent American, right-wing or left-wing, voting for such a person?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arkansas; US: California; US: District of Columbia; US: New York; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: 2004; ar; ca; culture; dc; editorial; elections; foreign; government; manchuriancandidate; maryhelp; news; ny; tx; wesleyclark
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To: Mich0127
bump!
41 posted on 09/17/2003 11:28:40 AM PDT by jmstein7
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To: prairiebreeze; Peach
Others who interviewed Gen. Clark in Kosovo were shocked by his casual talk about how he would launch military strikes against Hungary if it tried to send fuel to the Christian Serbians, or against Russian ships if they entered the war zone.

Time to do some research..

42 posted on 09/17/2003 11:30:33 AM PDT by Dog (This tagline is identical to the one you're reading.)
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To: colorado tanker
How is a guy who talks like that gonna get pinko Rat primary voters to vote for him,

I hope you are right. But...

The democrat voters are sheep, and will be led anywhere as long as certain keywords are repeated. In fact, if a sense of crises can be whipped up, they're even easier to lead. They are well into this phase of the campaign, with Saddam popping up here and there, Osama periodically mailing a cassette, talk of sabbotage and allegations of mistatements about wmd's.

Clarke will walk the domestic issue line, and this will take care of most of the herd. The remnant will receive appeals on the basis of his millitary "peace-keeping" expertise and service on behalf of the UN.

He's Mussolini spouting the same populist, socialist bilge in an obvious bid for power. This nanny wears jack-boots.

43 posted on 09/17/2003 12:33:28 PM PDT by tsomer (almost housebroken)
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To: jmstein7
The left-wing extremists will vote for Clark because Clark wants Socialized Medicine for all Americans.

hilly called it "Health Care" to hire her goal of Socializing the Medical Profession in America.
44 posted on 09/17/2003 12:33:37 PM PDT by Graewoulf
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To: XJarhead
Read the article carefully regarding the questionnaire given to Marines. It does not say that Clark was involved in that. The article just blames generally the Clinton Administration. Clark was not Commandant of the Marine Corps, nor was he CJCS. If he can be linked to that questionnaire somehow, fine. But I don't see any evidence of that.

To me that makes him in on it as I am sure he had knowledge. He has been Klinton's butt boy since 1993. They had to have had conversations about this. This guy did not get 4-stars on merit. The higher ups in the Pentagon said he did not deserve it. He got it by kissing Klinton's fat @$$.

45 posted on 09/17/2003 12:35:26 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (We'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American Way! Toby Keith)
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To: flamefront
The aim of the plan is partly to demonstrate a U.S. commitment to using military force in concert with other nations rather than unilaterally, an approach dubbed `assertive multilateralism' by Madeleine K. Albright, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

We'd still be debating if these friggin' nitwits had won in 2000.

46 posted on 09/17/2003 12:38:22 PM PDT by metesky (("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: nutmeg
Heard it, too, and had to suppress a laugh.

It's just a little ironic for Rush to be reading the Ponte piece on Wilkes Clark's role in Waco, including the paragraph about "the death, mostly by fire, of at least 82 men, women and children."

Rush, if you recall, was a steadfast defender of Janet Reno when she faced some hostile congressional questioning about what had happened. To my knowledge, he has never changed his opinion, even after considerable evidence that the federal government both overstated the case against Koresh and did everything it could to cover up its culpability for the deaths of so many innocents.

Except for party affiliation, Rush and Wesley could be blood brothers.

47 posted on 09/17/2003 12:39:39 PM PDT by logician2u
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To: jmstein7
Great post.
48 posted on 09/17/2003 12:41:51 PM PDT by austingirl
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To: metesky
She's in the news since she is on the NYSE board. She has been speaking against the administration and its treatment of the Arab world. She has a memoir about to be released.

Expect her and the rest of the Clinton crowd to be back.

(The left never moved on; why should anyone else.)

49 posted on 09/17/2003 12:46:04 PM PDT by flamefront (To the victor go the oils. No oil or oil-money for islamofascist weapons of mass annihilation.)
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To: RetiredArmy
To me that makes him in on it as I am sure he had knowledge.

Then you'd have to blame every other general officer in every branch of the service, and I can't imagine that going over well with the American people. And the bottom line is that, as an Army general, I can't imagine he'd have had much say over tests given to Marines, because I don't see his resume as including any joint commands that would have a significant component of Marines.

He has been Klinton's butt boy since 1993. They had to have had conversations about this. This guy did not get 4-stars on merit. The higher ups in the Pentagon said he did not deserve it. He got it by kissing Klinton's fat @$$.

I agree, but there's really no way to make that a campaign issue. Are we really going to attack the military career of a 4-star general? "Yeah, he's just Clinton's butt-boy and not worthy of his rank." Do we expect that to play well with the voters? A personal attack on the service of a decorated Vietnam Vet? His status as a vet doesn't make him immune from attack, but it gives him immunity for attacks on his military service. The Republican base may buy that, but the great middle will not. On top of that, all general officers must be approved by Congress, so how are we going to spin Republican approval of this supposedly unqualified general?

I know there are "political generals", and you know that. But most voters will just have a visceral, negative reaction to anyone who attacks a 4-star general for his military service, particularly in today's "pro-military" climate. That's just a political reality.

50 posted on 09/17/2003 12:48:32 PM PDT by XJarhead
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To: flamefront
Her time has come and gone, thankfully.

No one pays attention to the political opinions of the cleaning woman.

51 posted on 09/17/2003 12:48:34 PM PDT by metesky (("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: tsomer
Politics 101 is that a candidate has to secure his base during the primary season and then broaden his appeal in the general. Clark has been handpicked to broaden the Dim's appeal to voters in the middle who don't trust them on national security issues. But how does he secure the Dim base to get to the general? The Dim base hates the military. When Clinton ran as a DLC type "moderate" he got credibility with the base becaue of his dodging the draft and opposing the Vietnam War. The modern Dim party was born 1968-1972 over opposition to Vietnam and they're having a second childhood over opposing Iraq. How does Clark gain their trust?
52 posted on 09/17/2003 12:48:53 PM PDT by colorado tanker (USA - taking out the world's trash since 1776)
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To: DTA
Wonder if Neil Young will re-write "Ohio" to:

"Tin soldiers and Wesley's coming
We're finally on our own
In April I heard the drumming
80 dead outside Waco"
53 posted on 09/17/2003 12:51:21 PM PDT by stratman1969
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To: XJarhead; RetiredArmy
Clark had nothing to do with the questionaire. It was an Annapolis middie working on a thesis who passed this crapolla around.

But you can't deny that these attitudes pervaded the upper echelons of political officers looking to grease their way up Birry Krinton's pole.

Yuck! I just made myself sick.

54 posted on 09/17/2003 12:55:55 PM PDT by metesky (("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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To: Truth666
you are so right...Clinton/Cohen probably got Clark out of there ASAP to avoid Clark any exposure to the truth...it was Cohen that instituted the order that in all national elections in the future the military cannot vote on their bases - as has been the custom - which enables many military to vote (versus having to go off base and vote during the course of duty). I think the three C's are all in cohoots!
55 posted on 09/17/2003 1:06:49 PM PDT by TrueBeliever9
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To: metesky
Clark had nothing to do with the questionaire. It was an Annapolis middie working on a thesis who passed this crapolla around.

Oh crap. Looks like my alma mater has gone to hell....

56 posted on 09/17/2003 1:41:33 PM PDT by XJarhead
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To: XJarhead
It certainly keeps him from getting my vote.
57 posted on 09/17/2003 2:22:08 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (We'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American Way! Toby Keith)
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To: jmstein7
Clark's move for the nomination is a creation of the Clintons. The understand that their party is seen as being weak on defense, so this is their way of positioning a candidate to disarm that perception.

If he gets the nomination, you can bet that The Hildabeast will be waiting in the wings.

58 posted on 09/17/2003 2:30:50 PM PDT by Reactionary
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To: jmstein7
These “two stars” could become the 2004 Democratic “dream ticket,” if they can agree who should be on top and who on the bottom.

I'm pretty sure I know who will be on top, and who will be on the bottom.
59 posted on 09/17/2003 3:25:31 PM PDT by CoolPapaBoze
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To: Southack; Matthew James; SLB; Squantos; harpseal; river rat
Clark is a globalist, who would subordinate the US military to the UN if he could.

The dreams of Clark and the Clintons coincide: they want the US under UN authority, and they want to rule the UN.

Add to this Clark's statements that "anyone who wants an assault rifle should join the Army" and Clinton's similar statements about semi auto rifles and other firearms, and it's not too hard to see what kind of a future they would plan for us, if they had the power.

Thank God for the founding fathers, and their vision in including the 2nd Amendment.

I think today that domestic enemies pose a greater danger to our freedom than foreign ones.


60 posted on 09/17/2003 3:54:02 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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