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Wesley Clark

Imagine The Contempt

February 11, 2004

Christopher Hitchens: “Mr. Dean was simply appalling when he spun a yarn about a preteen girl supposedly impregnated by her father, and used it against parental notification of abortion. A physician has no business with demagogy of this kind even if the story is half-true, which in this case it apparently was not. And imagine the contempt that Mr. Dean must have felt for the pro-choice audience on whom he road-tested this potential but ultimately self-defeating fund-raising tactic.”

Hitchens makes no mention of the Internet other than to note that many a conspiracy theory about Sept. 11th originated from it, one or two of which Dean may even have fallen for. I have to wonder what the effect of Dean potentially not being a candidate either for President of Vice-President will have on future campaigns with regards to the Internet. Kerry and Edwards have been successful despite not having a major following on it, and while I'm an optimist in the Internet's continued growth, both in terms of size and power, if either Kerry or Edwards win, there will be Democrats in the future who will point to them and say "see? They didn't need the Internet, why should I?" And they'll have a point.

Betsy Devine: “From my point of view, Howard Dean has already won. He has turned the Democratic primaries from a banal centrist teaparty into a spirited critique of George W. Bush. Candidates like Kerry and Edwards who once were politely suggesting that Bush might have gone just a teeny bit too far got pushed by Howard to point out that Bush's presidency has been a major disaster to our economy, our children, and our friendships abroad.”

Dean can claim part responsibility for this, but that does not make him a winner. It's a little hard for me to accept anyone as a winner of anything if by their own definition and measurements—in Dean's case, being the Democratic nominee for President—they fail to achieve their goals.

Fred Wilson on Wes Clark's exit from the race: “He was good, but not great. He was a rookie and understandably made some rookie mistakes. But none of that changed my opinion that he'd have made a great president. Because he is a great leader.”

You know, if he said "player" instead of "president", he'd be accused of spouting sports clichés. Whatever. If I must tip my hand, Clark was up until now my favourite of the Democratic candidates, largely because he was general with real achievements—even though at the time, I (wrongly, in hindsight) opposed one of those achievements—but not insignificantly because of how he described meeting his wife. Sure, it was any one of coached, acted or exaggerated, but it was an effective display of humility. He may or may not be human, but in that quote, he sure comes across as one. It's funny that people don't understand why Clark wouldn't call Bush a deserter, but it's an easy one: as a former general, he has a pretty good idea of what a deserter really is.

tags: Howard Dean, Wesley Clark

Indistinguishable

January 4, 2004

Jay, after attending a speech and questions by General Wesley Clark: “I did not see any other bloggers but it's hard to tell us apart from the rest of the people.” (Emphasis added.)

tags: Wesley Clark, blogging

Maybe

December 19, 2003

Gert Clark: Wes and I met a dance in New York. My father's secretary was a volunteer for the USO. It was a USO dance for midshipmen and West Point cadets.

Wes Clark: I looked over at the door and in came a couple of young ladies, and one of them was very pretty.

Theodore P. Hill [Wes' roommate at West Point]: Everybody loved Gert, she had a wonderful figure, she had, just a very outgoing personality, very smart, and there was was a lot of competition for Gert.

Wes Clark: And I figured well, I'd better get there first.

Gert Clark: I liked him right away. He was very different than the men, the young man than I was used to dating. He was far more intellectual and in many ways far more innocent.

Wes Clark: We were taught as cadets that it was one of the greatest things you could ever offer a girl was a chance to come to West Point for a weekend date. And I said "well, we're going to have a swimming team picnic next week up at West Point. Would you like to come?" And she looked at me and she said "Maybe." [pause] She said I could call her. And um, I was, well, I was, a little bit, I was a little bit crushed by this. But intrigued.

tag: Wesley Clark

Madeleine's War

November 17, 2003

Fred Kaplan critiques the Peter J. Boyer article on General Wes Clark:

[H]e portrays Clark as not only maneuvering around the chiefs in his advocacy, but also as drawing a lackadaisical Clinton White House—distracted by domestic troubles over Monica Lewinsky—into war. In fact, however, Clinton may have been distracted somewhat, but Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was not. Albright was a fiery supporter of military intervention in the Balkans (many have written of the famous meeting where she appalled the reticent chiefs by saying, "What good are all these fine troops you keep telling us about if we can't use them?"). Albright was the prime mover; many observers at the time—supporters and critics alike—called it "Madeleine's war." And her prime collaborator, Richard Holbrooke, Clinton's envoy to Bosnia, also enjoyed direct access to the president.

I remember opposing the NATO intervention in Kosovo on sovereignty grounds, an opposition I've now come to regret. Safe Area Goražde: The War in Eastern Bosnia, 1992-95 by Joe Sacco is the only book I've read on the war, and it only deals with a specific event in the war. The book helped change my opinion and the regret of my former opinion is partly responsible for my support of the intervention in Iraq. (I still support intervention in Iraq, by the way. It's still a war, and securing Iraq post-invasion hasn't exactly been a cakewalk, but it's far from a quagmire.)

tags: Bosnia, Iraq, Madeleine Albright, Wesley Clark

On "Educated" Candidates

September 29, 2003

Two people favour educated leaders, especially for Presdient of the United States.

Eric: “I like my world leaders to be well educated intellectuals like Clark. I like them to be statesmen and not cowboys.”

TheYeti: “I want clear headed, classically educated, and morally strong people in the White House, regardless of their gender or the color of their skin.”

That's all well and good. (Note Eric's not-so-subtle dig at George W. Bush. Yeah, name-calling doesn't help your case.) I've said the following elsewhere, and I quote myself verbatim: “I prefer well-informed informed democrats who make decisions which benefit the most people most of the time and a decision-making process that is fairly flexible and transparent.” Educated leaders are more than welcome, but being "educated" is neither a sufficient nor even a necessary condition in order to get my vote.

And so there is no confusion, I mean democrats in the sense that a person listens to the electors as well as leads them, and not in the capitalized Democratic sense which refers to the American political party.

tags: George W. Bush, Wesley Clark

Image As Substance in Politics

September 28, 2003

David Greenberg, discussing Wesley Clark's entry into the Presidential race, his grasp of the issues and whether he has a good enough image to be President:

In reality, we vote not for the candidate who most perfectly shares our views on issues of the day - if we even possess such precise views in the first place - but for the one who moves us. A candidate's background, passions, intellect, earthiness, rhetorical style, maturity, temperament, candor, empathy, and vision - as well as related elements of image - determine whether we like or dislike a politician.

tag: Wesley Clark
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