Drafting General Clark

CONTINETTI, MATTHEW

Drafting General Clark Another slippery candidate from Arkansas. BY MATTHEW CONTINETTI GENERAL WESLEY K. CLARK is running for president. Maybe. With little over a year left before the 2004...

...Then there's the question of partisanship...
...On television, Clark speaks as if there were a public outcry for a change in leadership today, just as there was when Eisenhower was pressured into running for president in 1952...
...Susan Putney, New Hampshire coordinator of "Draft Clark 2004," says the message "didn't come to us directly," but "when he said it, we picked up on it right away...
...Clark is more Clinton than Eisenhower...
...There's only one problem...
...Clark's message was also reported in the Boston Globe...
...A month after Clark's charge was picked up by columnist Paul Krug-man, the New York Times published a letter from Clark attempting to clarify his story...
...Clark's refusal to admit he's a Democrat points to his biggest liability...
...But the Eisenhower comparison Matthew Continetti is an editorial assistant at THE WEEKLY STANDARD...
...There isn't really a "Middle East think tank" in Canada...
...This isn't surprising...
...He's a slippery character whose public statements remind you of a fellow Rhodes scholar from Arkansas...
...Especially if the top of the ticket is someone who needs to burnish his national security credentials—someone like the current governor of Vermont...
...Aping Eisenhower, Clark would like to appear nonpartisan...
...This time, Clark said the only phone call he received was from a man at a "Middle East think tank" in Canada...
...And while Clark's letter to the New York Times only further muddled his story (if he wants to be president, Clark is going to have to get better at dissembling on his feet), it was still a valiant attempt at damage control...
...With little over a year left before the 2004 election, NATO's former supreme allied commander hasn't announced his candidacy...
...A group of "Draft Clark" activists has pushed the general to run through petitions and websites...
...Clark's supporters like to compare him to Dwight D. Eisenhower...
...Clark's message to the Draft Clark movement isn't the only signal that he's moved closer to announcing his candidacy...
...Clark strikes a similar pose...
...Ike hadn't even voted for president when he first ran for the office, and he ran as a Republican largely by default...
...In July, he fielded questions from George Stephanopoulos on ABC's This Week...
...But the truth is Clarke's a moderate Democrat...
...I'm a centrist on most of these issues, and I've got people after me from both sides of the aisle...
...There's also the question of Clark's involvement with the "Draft Clark" activists...
...If Clark communicates with what might soon become his campaign staff, that's nothing to be ashamed of...
...If he fails to capture the nomination, his supporters say the general would still make an attractive vice presidential candidate...
...He often mentions that he was a White House fellow in the Ford administration, though White House fellows aren't appointed by the president...
...Both men were successful generals who led NATO...
...Most important, both were recruited to run for president...
...breaks down on close inspection, for a couple of reasons...
...The record suggests otherwise...
...I haven't said [that I'd run as a Democrat]," Clark said on NBC...
...And he's voted in Democratic primaries in Arkansas—an act that requires him to be a registered Democrat...
...But in the Globe report, Clark's "adviser" was said to be volunteers involved with the Draft Clark efforts...
...If there were any, I'd be able to come up with their names pretty quickly," says David Rudd, president of the Canadian Institute of Strategic Studies...
...Taking cues from Eisenhower's 1952 campaign, the activists want Clark to play the reluctant warrior who is called to serve his country in a time of crisis...
...Both Clark and the various groups encouraging his presidential ambitions say that there is no communication between the two camps...
...Two days after Clark told Tim Russert that he was "going to have to consider" running for president, "Draft Clark 2004" filed with the Federal Elections Commission to become a PAC...
...I've been nonpartisan...
...It turns out that Clark's supporters compare the general to the wrong president...
...According to National Journal's politics Hotline, Clark recently told an "adviser" to "crank up" grassroots efforts in preparation for a Labor Day campaign announcement...
...What happens if Clark enters the race...
...Media coverage of the general, a former Rhodes scholar who graduated at the top of his class at West Point, is positive...
...But Clark sure is considering a run as a Democrat for commander in chief, as he tells any reporter who will listen to him...
...Clark has encouraged Howard Dean's insurgency...
...Just look at Clark's story, first told on Meet the Press, that he received a call on 9/11 from "people around the White House" urging him to publicly link the terrorist attacks to Saddam Hussein...
...Clark, at 58, is an intelligent, articulate, and telegenic retired general who led a coalition of 19 often querulous nations to victory in the Kosovo conflict...
...Clark certainly acts like a presidential candidate...
...When Hannity pressed Clark further, the general ended the line of questioning by saying he wouldn't "go into" his White House sources...
...But Clark's analysis flies in the face of President Bush's approval ratings, which hover around 60 percent...
...He refuses to admit that he's a Democrat...
...This isn't too hard to figure out: Speculation about a presidential bid started when Clark met with some Democratic fundraisers in New York City last October...
...They've even made a television commercial that has already aired in New Hampshire...
...If Clark was contacted by any purported experts or scholars, chances are they would be connected to a university...
...He appeared on NBC's Meet the Press in June...
...In August, he entered CNN's Crossfire and appeared on NewsNight with Aaron Brown...
...On Fox's Hannity and Colmes two weeks later, Clark pinned the call on "a fellow in Canada who is part of a Middle Eastern think tank who gets inside intelligence information...
...Why does he pretend otherwise...
...Clark cancelled his gig as a military-affairs talking head on CNN in June, neutralizing any potential conflict-of-interest accusations...
...Get your "Dean-Clark 2004" bumper stickers ready...
...While few people outside politics have heard of Clark, Eisenhower was one of the most popular figures in American history...

Vol. 8 • September 2003 • No. 48


 
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