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A militarist as peace candidate: Retired general
Wesley Clark enters Democratic presidential race
By Alex Lefebrve
29 September 2003
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Retired US general Wesley Clark, who commanded NATO forces
during the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia, entered the contest for
the Democratic presidential nomination on September 18. Clark
became the tenth Democrat to announce his candidacy for the November
2004 election, and the first new entry since early this year.
Although Clark centered his initial statements on criticism
of President Bushs policies in Iraq, his campaign in no
way represents a repudiation of militarism. His candidacy is rather
bound up with the calculations of an important section of the
Democratic Party establishment, which is dissatisfied with the
present state of the contest for the partys presidential
nomination.
Since last March, the retired general has been widely reported
to be preparing a presidential bid, while conducting a well-publicized
effort to make up his own mind and sound out possible support
within the Democratic leadership. The New York Times reported
that former president Bill Clinton was drumming up support for
Clark among Democratic Party regulars and donors earlier
this summer.
The timing of Clarks declaration reflects interrelated
concerns of sections of the Democratic Party establishment over
the growing support for former Vermont governor Howard Dean, whose
repeated attacks on Bush, initially over Iraq and then over a
wider range of policies, propelled him to the lead both in nationwide
polls and in the first key primary states, New Hampshire and Iowa.
Those party leaders encouraging Clarkincluding Bill and
Hillary Clinton, former vice president Al Gore and many of their
closest aidesare not concerned about what Dean himself would
do in office. He had a record in Vermont as a conservative Clintonite
New Democrat who insisted on strictly balanced budgets,
took pro-business positions on environmental and regulatory issues,
and favored the death penalty.
Rather, they are afraid of the expectations that a successful
Dean campaign might foster among his supporters, particularly
as Dean has made increasingly strident appeals to antiwar sentiment.
As the British magazine the Economist wrote on June 26,
For good or ill, Mr. Dean has decided to climb on the back
of the leftist tiger. He cannot climb off without being eaten
alive. The sight of Mr. Dean on the tigers back is striking
terror into the party establishment... The problem for the Democrats
is not just the man from Vermont but the rank-and-file rage that
he embodies.
The New York Times wrote on September 17 that Clarks
campaign is being designed as an establishment counterweight
to Dr. Deans effort. When asked about this, Clark
confirmed that he views himself as an attempt to appeal to an
antiwar constituency while carrying them to the right politically.
He said: Ive heard that view [that I am the Stop
Dean candidate] expressed. But Ive heard a lot of
people say: You cut across party lines. You are drawing
independents. You draw Republicans. They want to know more
than just the war was wrong.
The upper levels of Clarks campaign staff are in large
part drawn from the right-wing Democratic Leadership Council (DLC)
and the Clinton-Gore entourage. His current campaign staff includes
businessman and 1992 Clinton campaign chief of staff Eli Segal,
Clinton White House counselor Bruce Lindsey, Clinton Presidential
Foundation president Skip Rutherford, Gore chief of staff Ron
Klain, former Clinton/Gore communications aide Mark Fabiani, and
Donald Fowler, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee
under Clinton. According to Will Marshall, co-founder of the DLC,
referring to Clark, Rich Democrats are wowed by him.
Media-driven polls
Press coverage of Democratic candidates has largely focused
on Clark since the last few days before he declared his candidacy,
and other Democratic candidates, including Dean, are scheduling
their media events around Clarks so as to receive some press
coverage. The result of the media barrageincluding dueling
cover stories on Clark in Time and Newsweekwas
quickly reflected in opinion polls, which showed that the former
general, almost completely unknown either to the general population
or to rank-and-file Democratic voters, now led George W. Bush
in the polls.
A Sept. 22 CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll showed Bushs approval
rating falling to 50 percent, with a disapproval rating of 47
percent, and trailing two Democratic candidates in head-to-head
match-ups. According to the poll, 49 percent would vote for Clark
versus 46 percent for Bush in a Clark-Bush election and 48 percent
would vote for Senator John Kerry versus 47 percent for Bush in
a Kerry-Bush election. Despite his relative lack of either political
history or name recognition (more than 42 percent of Democratic
voters had not heard of him on Sept. 1), Clark was the favorite
candidate among Democratic voters: 22 percent said they would
vote for him, versus 13 percent for the second-place candidate,
Dean.
Clark is neither a well-known public figure nor a popular hero
for his military exploits, the most successful of which was the
brutal 79-day campaign to bomb Yugoslavia into submission, a war
so one-sided that the US military did not suffer a single death
in combat. His rocketing to the top of the polls demonstrates,
first, that the polls themselves are driven largely by media coverage.
This is especially the case for a Democratic nomination contest
that has failed to arouse any great popular support. None of the
Democratic presidential hopefulsincluding Deanhas
any genuine mass base.
The same must be said of Bush, whose supposedly unchallengeable
public standing has crumbled amid the barrage of reports of rising
resistance in Iraq to the US occupation. The latest poll follows
logically from previous surveys that showed Bush defeating all
named Democratic presidential candidates but losing when pitted
against an unnamed Democrat or when voters were asked whether
Bush deserved a second term, without specifying who would replace
him. Clark, behind a wave of media publicity, fills the part of
the generic Democrat, with his banal, telegenic and
misleading campaign.
Clark flip-flops on war vote
Clark has sought to exploit the Iraq crisis by mildly criticizing
Bushs invasion of the country and appealing for international
assistance. He has claimed that the case for war with Iraq has
been made under false pretenses and called for Bush
to be held accountable. He has also stated that the
Iraq war should not be the centerpiece of an anti-terrorist campaign.
Faced with the need to appeal to voters radicalized by the
Bush presidency, Clark has attempted to put a thin populist, or
at least anti-Bush, gloss on his candidacy. In addition to his
limited criticisms of the war, Clark chose to make his first campaign
speech in Florida. In a muted protest of Bushs theft of
the 2000 elections in Florida, Mark Fabiani said this was because
the general wanted to send a message that he will fight
for every vote and the right of every person to have their vote
counted.
However, the growing political gulf between the ruling elites
and popular hostility to Bushs militarism has made it difficult
for Clark to maintain this stance. During his Florida speech,
Clark rhetorically asked why the US had invaded Iraq. He was greeted
with spontaneous cries of oil and Halliburton
(the oil construction firm that used to employ current vice-president
Dick Cheney and that has benefited handsomely from US government
contracts to rebuild Iraqi oil wells). Anxious not to overstate
his opposition to the war and publicly raise the issue of the
Bush administrations criminality, Clark lied, lamely responding:
We dont know. And thats the truth. We have to
ask that question.
Clark has issued contradictory statements on the war that indicate
his antiwar stance is largely an act he plays to win support among
radicalized Democratic voters. On Sept. 18, in a clear continuation
of his previous limited criticisms of the Iraq war, Clark said:
I dont know if I would have or not [voted for the
congressional resolution authorizing Bush to invade Iraq]. Ive
said it both ways, because when you get into this, what happens
is you have to put yourself in a position. On balance, I probably
would have voted for it.
When it became clear that this would allow political opponents
or rivals such as Dean to expose the bogus character of his antiwar
stance, Clark beat a hasty retreat. The next day he reversed himself,
telling the Associated Press: Lets make one thing
real clear: I would never have voted for this war.
Clarks perspective is to use European and international
support to bolster a US occupation of Iraq. On Sept. 8, he told
National Public Radios Dick Gordon: We should use
the UN for what it is good for. It offers credibility... We can
use the UN in Iraq to help spread the blame aroundlet them
hate some French and others, instead of hating just us.
On domestic policy, Clark has made few policy statements except
for taking liberal positions on certain social questions such
as abortion and advocating a partial repeal of Bushs tax
cuts for those earning more than $200,000 a year. There are significant
questions as to his allegiance to the Democratic Party. According
to Newsweek, Clark was furious in the aftermath of Sept.
11, 2001, when Bush political advisor Karl Rove turned him down
for an official position in the administrations war
on terrorism. This January, Clark told two prominent RepublicansColorado
governor Bill Owens and University of Denver president Marc Holtzmanthat
I would have been a Republican if Karl Rove had returned
my phone calls. Newsweek added: Soon thereafter,
in fact, Clark quit his day job and began seriously planning to
enter the presidential raceas a Democrat.
The Democratic Party establishment is more than willing to
overlook Clarks late-comer status, not only to employ him
for the immediate purpose of stalling the Dean campaign, but because
his status as a career military officer who commanded a victorious
war supposedly makes him more electable (i.e., less
vulnerable to a right-wing media barrage equating criticism of
Bush with treason).
Attempts to present Clark as a candidate somehow opposed to
militarism, or even as a candidate whose brand of militarism will
reduce international tensions, fall apart upon any investigation
into Clarks past. As NATO commander in the late 1990s, he
was a fervent supporter of a more powerful intervention, seeking
to supplement the deadly mass bombings of Serbia and Kosovo with
a ground invasion. While pressing for permission to bomb more
civilian targets, Clark expressed his frustration at the
only air campaign in history in which lovers strolled down riverbanks
in the gathering twilight and ate at outdoor cafes to watch the
fireworks.
Clark also ordered British general Michael Jackson to storm
Pristina airport in order to prevent Russian troops from taking
positions there. Jackson refused, saying: Im not going
to start World War III for you. According to Newsweek,
Both Jackson and Clark appealed to their political leadership
back home for support. Jackson got all the help he needed; Clark
didnt. Effectively, his orders as Supreme Commander were
overruled. Clark was dismissed shortly thereafter. He parlayed
his military experience into a number of advisory positions, most
notably at the Stephens investment-banking firm of Little Rock,
Ark., and as a CNN commentator during the Iraq war.
See Also:
NATO general ordered
military assault on Russian troops at end of Yugoslav war
[4 August 1999]
NATO forces complicit
in ethnic cleansing of Serbs
[25 June 1999]
US military uses Yugoslavia
as testing ground for high-tech weaponry
[27 March 1999]
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