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August 19, 2008

Gen. Clark will speak at German Wind Energy Forum

Alternative Fuel News

Clark Headlining Wind Energy Forum

General Wesley Clark, the former Supreme Allied Commander of military forces in Europe and former presidential candidate, will be leading the opening day’s session at the HUSUM WindEnergy trade show and congress in Husum, Germany Sept. 9-13, 2008.

Clark will be speaking at the “Wind Power Forum: The New Energy Economy,” at the conference.

HUSUM is the world’s largest, longest-running and best-attended wind energy industry trade show, congress and job fair taking place in Husum, a small North Frisian coastal town.

More details about HUSUM are available at the event’s web site.

HUSUM WindEnergy


“This discussion will highlight the important economic benefits of wind energy to regions around the world,” said GWEC Secretary General Steve Sawyer. “General Clark is a strong, globally recognized leader who understands the value of wind energy in terms of the environment and economic opportunities for communities around the world. We’re delighted he is a member of our expert panel.”

In addition to Clark, confirmed speakers include German Minister for Economics and Technology Michael Glos and
Schleswig-Holstein’s Minister-President Peter Harry Carstensen.

Schleswig-Holstein is the northern federal state where Husum is located. Additional panelists will represent specific regional authorities from China, Denmark, Germany, Spain and the United States.

Sawyer said the forum’s objectives are to raise political awareness among decision-makers and ensure they are informed on the state of wind energy technologies and the opportunities wind energy provides in terms of electricity production, job creation, economic growth and environmental impact reduction.


June 12, 2008

Gen. Clark interviewed on wind energy



RenewableEnergyWorld.com talked with General Wesley Clark (Ret.), Director of Emergya Wind Technologies at WINDPOWER 2008 in Houston.

Gen. Clark said that wind energy is at the forefront of renewable energy techonolgies and is ready to not only produce a major share of the U.S. electricity supply but also to help the U.S. become a more secure nation.

Renewable Energy World

September 17, 2007

Wes Clark's life and times

Leonard Lopate of WNYC in New York conducted a splendid interview with Clark. The General has been making the rounds on the release of his new book, A Time To Lead.

Here is a taste:

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, I always wanted to- I-I wanted a career of service, and I, I-I'd, I wanted to be an engineer. I wanted to be i-in space or aeronautics in some way, and I had a, had a National Honor Society scholarship to Georgia Tech, and I had a, a National Merit Society scholarship, I think it was to Duke, and- But I wasn't satisfied. I couldn't see that, and I was at American Legion Boys State at Camp Robinson in the summer of 1961. It was after the eleventh grade. And they always encouraged us, there were 20 or 30 of us who were obviously college-bound they encouraged to go to Boys State and spend five days with the American Legion learning citizenship and how to be elected and leadership and all that. And a West Point cadet came and spoke to us, and I was just totally moved by the vision of the Military Academy. I walked out. I told my friends, "That's it. I'm going to West Point."

Leonard Lopate: And it was a hard school to get into, and it's a hard school to survive in.

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: It's a challenge, and it was tougher then, I think, to get in, because the school was a little bit smaller than it is today, and the nomination process was strictly political. I wrote to the - the most prominent Senator in the state I thought was Senator Bill Fulbright - and I wrote to, to Senator Fulbright, and I got back a postcard that was, in essence said, 'Thanks for your interest in national security, but there's no vacancies.' It didn't say, 'Apply again.' It said, you know, 'That's it.' I got interviewed by Senator McClellan, and it was one of those funny moments that you remember a long time. You knock on the door. You report in. I'd been at this military high school. So, I kind of knew how to deal with senior people, and so, I knocked on the door and said, "Sir, this is Wesley Clark." And he was sitting behind this huge desk, and McClellan wasn't a big man. He was like four, five-four or five-five I guess, but I didn't know that then. I just saw an older man behind a desk, and he looked me up and down. And it was September of my senior year in high school. And he looked at me, and I was, I was wearing chinos and a, and a short-sleeved shirt. He say, "Boy," he said, "How old are you?" I said, "Well, Sir, I'm 16 years old." He said, "How much do you weigh?" I said, "Sir, I weigh 137 and a half pounds. I, I'd weighed myself at the Boy's Club the night before, and I don't know why I said that, but- He said- So, he put, put on his best investigatory stance. He said, "So, I guess you make good grades, huh?" And he gave me one of these hard looks that you'd give one of his witnesses before his racketeering committee in the Senate. And, and I said, "Yes, Sir." And he said, "All A's?" And (laughs), and, and I said, "Yes, Sir." And then I realized well, not exactly and I tried to explain that I'd taken Honors Math and in my junior year, and it was pre-calculus, and it was a, one of these first advance placement courses. So you got five points for an A and that, even though an A was only four points. So, if you got a B, it counted as an A, and the guidance councillor said it would count as an A. And I'm, and I'm trying to explain all this, and he's looking at me just sort of, you know, watching me shrivel under his, under his intense prosecutorial gaze. And he just, he finally just said, he said, "Son," he said, "you're not old enough, and you're not big enough, and you're not smart enough to go to West Point. So, if you still want it next year, you come back and see me then." And (laughs) that was all.

Leonard Lopate: And you did.

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: No, I didn't go back and see him. I found one other way.

Leonard Lopate: (laughs)

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: We had a Congressman. (laughs) I wrote the Congressman. The Congressman had several other people who'd wanted it, and he let us take a test. So, I took the U.S. Civil Service Test in December, and I got the highest score, and I got the test- I got the appointment to West Point.

Leonard Lopate: And you call West Point an 'achievement training factory.' So, obviously you think that it was, it really was a good education.

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Tremendous education. It was like, it was like-

Leonard Lopate: Would you like to see all of our schools teach that way?

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: If you had the right faculty, and you could teach that way, I think it does some remarkable things. I was lucky though, because I balanced it with Oxford later. West Point was a, it was recitation every day, we called it - six days a week of math plebe year for an hour and 15 minutes. You roared through the math book. And they didn't teach in class. When you went into class, they said, they took attendance. There were 15 of us in the class. And then they said, "Gentlemen, take boards." And you left your seat. You stood up, faced a blackboard. And they hand out a little mimeographed list of problems, normally three or four problems. You took a ruler and chalk. You marked off your blackboard. You solved each problem. And after 20 minutes or thirty minutes, the professor would say, "Cease work," and you'd face about. If you looked to the side during the time you were supposed to be facing that blackboard, that was an honor violation, you'd be kicked out. And then you had to give the recitation, how you solved the problem.

Leonard Lopate: Well, I'm not s-

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: And that was the end of the class.

Leonard Lopate: I'm not sure that's the best preparation for life.

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: (laughs)

Leonard Lopate: But it did get you-

GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: That's a good one.

But be sure to read the entire transcript.

And buy the book: A Time To Lead.

June 13, 2007

General Clark debuts on MSNBC

After two years in service to the Democratic Party and the 50-State Strategy, bringing good common sense and outright brilliance to Fox News, Clark has signed on as an MSNBC news analyst. This morning, at the station attending a meeting, MSNBC put him straight on the air, twice. I guess they are glad to have him. This makes the third cable station for Clark: CNN, Fox and now MSNBC. His stint at Fox, combined with his campaigning for 94 Democratic candidates, helped turn several Red districts Blue in 2006. One of Politico's bubbleheads broke the story yesterday, or thought she did, in the smarmy Politico style. Apparently the gossip monger neglected to confirm her sources and got it wrong. Clark's ending his contract at Fox in favor of MSNBC and Harold Ford's beginning his own Fox contract a few months ago are unrelated. Besides, who knew Harold Ford was a military expert? Somebody should tell Fox, quick, they've been had. Then somebody else tell the Politico before they get it wrong ... again.

From Hotline:

A More Candidate-Friendly Audience?

Retired Gen. Wesley Clark will now be exclusively on MSNBC as a military analyst, sources have confirmed to the Hotline. Clark has still not ruled out a possible White House bid and MSNBC would be a much more Dem-friendly audience than his old gig -- Fox News Channel [EMILY GOODIN].

Now we're talking.

May 10, 2007

Wes Clark gets "Top Dog" from NewsHounds

The General, taking it outside the Democratic echo chamber to the battlefield, shows how it's done. "Don't you try to charm me, General!" Lord have mercy.

O'Reilly, squinting, said he's going to have "my guys" FedEx Clark a package of who this guy really is. Clark said "That's character assassination", and O'Reilly, wide-eyed now, replied "You bet it is!" Realizing what he just said, he started shouting, "No! It's facts!" Clark was talking about the American values Soros puts his energy and money behind - democratization, free press - and O'Reilly shouted "that's bull!" Famous refuge when he's losing. He started ticking off on his fingers all the causes Soros supposedly supports that O'Reilly must find un-American: open borders, legalized narcotics, euthanasia, blah blah blah.

Soros is "undermining the country abroad, wants a one-world government, as radical..there isn't a person in the country more radical than him. You took 75K from the most radical individual in the United States of America!"

Oh puhleeeze - hyperbole much?

Clark kept his cool, and said "You're just going after somebody." O'Reilly said "You bet!" Clark: "It's personal, and it's wrong." BOR: "It's not personal!"

Clark told him to look at the results; he doesn't have to defend his views. O'Reilly, out of everything, said that Clark is a patriot, but who he associates with is what people are going to judge him by. Clark, bless his heart, smiled and said "Well, I'm associating with you." (I'm giving him Top Dog for that line alone, though the rest of his appearance was superb also.)

Read more at NewsHounds and watch video of the interview.

Here's the VoteVets ad video discussed earlier in the O'Reilly segment.

For old times sake, here is the classic Fox smackdown by the General in 2003 in New Hampshire.


May 2, 2007

Using military force to bring peace

WAR -- THE FINISHING TOUCH

The author contemplates various instances in which military force did indeed bring conflict to an end.

By Elliott Beaumont

Starting a war requires little more than a basic form of primeval intelligence. Stopping a war, however, calls for the concerted dedication of many superior human beings. It is consequently a simplistic but undeniable deduction that he who initiates a conflict is not likely to be the one to bring it to a timely end, and the current conflict in Iraq is clear evidence of that premise.

-snip

It is not a simple task to identify individuals who are singly responsible for reestablishing peace. That was meant to be the responsibility of the United Nations which was intended to be a mechanism where all the world's countries would be members, thereby insuring that most problem which had the potential of leading to a war, would be solved through internal diplomacy, and coercion. Yet, here we are today, deeply involved in Iraq, endlessly meditating on a genocide in Sudan, incapable of moving on African famine, and all this, after passing on the infamous Rwandan genocide.

Army Generals, such as Dwight Eisenhower and Douglas McArthur, used massive military resources while inflicting and sustaining great personnel losses to achieve peace, and we do not belittle their great accomplishments. We would prefer, however, to present our badges for individual peacemaking accomplishments, to individuals whose foresight may well have saved many lives while also achieving a semblance of peace.

-snip

General Wesley Clark, a giant intellect and for that reason misunderstood by many bystander Generals, in cooperation with a sprightly Madeleine Albright, achieved a total victory in short order and limited casualties in the Kosovo humanitarian conflict, by waging an intense air war, while resisting all efforts to turn it into a ground disaster.

-snip

Could near-miss attacks using cruise missiles provide a possible solution to some of today's problems? This is a profoundly disturbing thought but no more disturbing than some potential counter alternatives, which are being openly advocated by some nation leaders whose threats cannot be ignored, and whose goodwill it is impossible to imagine? Could this also be a possible tactic against militant and terrorist strongholds? Against repugnant dictators? Isn't it time to stop playing political war games, and put an end to all this? It worked for General Clark. Did it not also work in 1945?

-more

February 4, 2007

"You see that big pothole?!"

From Daily Kos thanks to plant's diary


Corey Renzella: General Clark, you were in the military for over thirty years; practically your entire adult life. It's obvious, therefore, that you have foreign policy credentials, but what in your career has prepared you for the domestic challenges that you will surely face if elected President.

Wesley Clark: Well, I was responsible in every stage of the military for the people that served under me, and for the families that were there. And what we discovered in the volunteer army was that you couldn't ignore these people. The army's sixty percent or more married. And so, their housing, the schools the children went to, the availability of health care, the time off they had with their families, the ability to get the children babysitters or later child development center spaces, all that was very important to being able to build a unit and a team. And so, like every other leader in the army, I was very concerned with it.

When I was the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe I had forty-four thousand schoolchildren located in England, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Germany, Italy and Turkey. And we worried about those schools. They were funded by the Department of Defense. They were my responsibility. And the students that were there were children of the people that worked for me. And so we had to make sure the curriculum was right, the funding was right, the administration for it was right, the parent teacher student associations were right. We changed the curriculum, we changed the leadership in some of the schools. We put in new procedures. We tried to give greater local control. We got rid of Mathland. We fought to get Headstart in those schools and so forth. But I worried equally about health care. The doctors, the hours the clinics were open.

When I was the commander at Fort Irwin out in the Mojave destert, we were a complete isolated community. I held Town Hall meetings. I owned everything on that post. I remember driving down post one day and my wife said "You see that big pothole?!". I said "Yes dear". She said "That's your pothole!". She said "Your engineers, they've been threatening to fix that pothole for a week and it's still there! When are you going to do something about it?". I said "Yes dear". And she said "By the way", she said, "Do you know that your commissary is out of Pampers?!". I said "No dear, but I'll fix that too."

-more

January 27, 2007

James Lee Witt Associates Receives Award for NOLA disaster recovery program

James Lee Witt Associates, the public safety and crisis management firm founded by the former Clinton FEMA director and of which General Clark is Vice Chairman, was recognized by the American Society of Landscape Architects for its disaster recovery efforts in Louisiana. The award specifically applauds the firm's development of an online planning program for community recovery following natural disasters, to assist FEMA and the State of Louisiana's Recovery Authority Partnership.

"With the assistance of James Lee Witt Associates, Louisiana and the entire Gulf Coast are better equipped to meet the challenges of rebuilding after the devastation of hurricanes Katrina and Rita," said Patrick Moore, Managing Principal, Moore Planning Group and Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architect.

Press Release

January 9, 2007

Warheads

A Clark Community Network Book Club review by CarolNYC.

Warheads: Cable News And the Fog of War
Author: Kenneth Allard

I picked up this book by MSNBC military analyst Ken Allard at a NYC book sale because I expected that there would be some Wes references...and, of course, there were. I also thought it would be interesting to read Allard’s take on cable news and how it works. It’s a pretty interesting book overall. I really don’t know anything about Mr. Allard’s commentary not having seen him enough to even recognize him so I wondered how I’d react to him from his writing. Having now read the book, I think I actually sort of liked him.

I did find him to have a snarky tone toward Clinton throughout, writing things like “every time the president got in trouble, it seemed like he launched cruise missiles at places most Americans couldn’t find on the map.” But he throws some snark in there about Bush too so it kind of balances things out.

He talks about NPR as if the staff were a bunch of hippies “Beards and earth shoes were everywhere---and these were only the women”...but also gives them props for being one of few outlets doing a good job on dealing with news stories in great depth.

I found him pretty fair on the whole.

Continue reading "Warheads" »

December 7, 2006

New book for Wes Clark

Retired U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark writing book to be released in '07

Associated Press, 12/6/08

LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas: Retired U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark said he is writing a book to be published next year but said political observers should not read too much into that.

Clark, who lives in Arkansas, has said he is considering running for president. But he said his book announcement is not evidence that he will run.

"I just want to participate in the American dialogue about where we are as a nation," Clark said Wednesday.

Clark, who unsuccessfully ran for the Democratic nomination in 2004, said his untitled book will be published next year.

"It's going to be about different aspects of America that I've lived through," Clark told The Associated Press. "I'm going to talk about growing up in the South. I'm going to talk about Vietnam and the Army. I'm going to talk about rebuilding the Army, and I'm going to talk about the post Cold War world."

-more

November 26, 2006

CCN Series Blog: "Generation Whatever"

Clark: "It's easier to start a war than to end it."

Young Clarkies In New York City...


Wes Clark 2008

And In Los Angeles...

Professor Clark

by JMora on Clark Community Network

On Tuesday, November 21, 2006 I had the great opportunity to see General Wesley Clark in a somewhat unfamiliar role, as of recently anyway. On Tuesday Gen. Clark was Prof. Clark, where he lectured to about 300 students at UCLA in a lower division Global Issues course. This was a great opportunity for the Generation “Whatever” students to get introduced to the General and see him in a non-political environment.

Continue reading "CCN Series Blog: "Generation Whatever"" »

November 17, 2006

"Warheads: Cable News And the Fog of War"

Retired Col. Ken Allard examines his (and Clark's) experiences with SecDef Rumsfeld, as military commentators on CNN leading up to the war. Allard's book is called "Warheads: Cable News And the Fog of War," available at Amazon.

San Antonio Express-News, 11/15/06

-snip

Some of us got an up-close and personal view of all this.

As "Warheads," my term for the principal military analysts of cable TV networks, we were granted unprecedented access to Rumsfeld and his inner circle

Tactfully termed "retired military advisers to the secretary of defense," the group, started in late 2002, included generals such as Wes Clark, Barry McCaffrey, Don Shepperd and Dave Grange, men with a profound understanding of war. Given the slightest chance, they might have offered Rumsfeld some usefully independent views.

We were, after all, doing precisely that every night on your TV. As the networks struggled to cater to an audience with few personal connections to war, the Warheads were hastily recruited to stand before the cameras and put things into context — hopefully in three minutes or less.

The Pentagon quickly grasped these new realities, reasoning it was senseless to cajole the press corps while making no effort to have the party line uttered from our lips.

During our sessions with him — 17 in all — it was difficult not to like Rumsfeld or admire his razor-sharp wit. But I didn't have to work for him or bear personal responsibility for his decisions. It became progressively clearer that the Warheads would never make the slightest dent in his mental defenses. From my humble seat at the far end of his conference table, I recalled one of the oldest jests in academe: That Rumsfeld was using the Warheads the same way a drunk uses a lamppost — for support rather than illumination.

-more

September 18, 2006

Republicans for Wesley Clark

A fifteen-year-old in Ohio started this group on MySpace a few days ago. It has 120 members, so far. Oops, make that 124.

Republicans for Wesley Clark

Here he is. He calls himself "Wesley."

repubsforclark_m.jpg

Maybe there's hope for the world.


Speaking of American youth, General Clark is joining the faculty of UCLA as a Senior Fellow. (Rock the Vote, Wes.) However, the LA Times reporter is mistaken. The Clarks have no intention of selling their home in Little Rock and moving to California, so says WesPac.


May 26, 2006

Our hero's welcome in Kosovo - American flags and flowers

Moral support, moral values, moral war

Earlier this week, General Clark called President Clinton's Kosovo intervention, "The perfect model for how the U.S. should be operating in world affairs." He said, "We provided leadership during the air campaign. In the aftermath, it was actually the Europeans who provided 80% of the forces, and the military leadership on the ground. This was really U.S. moral support and U.S. guidance, but not U.S. domination."


They loved him then


clark-kosovo-kids.jpg

In 1999, NATO air attacks stopped Serbian forces' reported terror against ethnic-Albanian separatists and ever since has maintained protection of ethnically motivated crimes. Clark was the NATO commander during the 3-month air raids on Serbia-Montenegro. (UPI)


They love him still


Clark_Kosovo-flowers.jpg


"I am confident this question can be resolved, perhaps in several months Kosova will be an independent country and will respect the rights of all its citizens, regardless of their ethnic background and I think this is a future nation that is bright with promise. It will be part of the community of nations and its citizens will have the opportunity to accomplish their dreams." (KohaVision TV, Pristina)

“I think an independent Kosovo will add to the stability of the region. It will terminate these long-lasting questions about the status of Kosovo and it will enable people both in Serbia and in Kosovo to focus on really important issues.” (AP)


WKC_award400.jpg

receiving the Hasan Prishtina award

Clark, who is on a three-day visit to the disputed province, met Kosovo’s President Fatmir Sejdiu and Prime Minister Agim Ceku, who said Clark was a great friend of Kosovo, who stood by it in its most difficult times. ”He is and will always be honored by the people of Kosovo." (Defense News)

WesleyClarkStreet400.jpg

with Prime Minister Agim Ceku in Djakovica (note street sign and Muslims
waving American flags; outside America, a sight for sore eyes indeed)

WKC_factoryCloseup400.jpg

down to business touring the NewKo Llamkos Steel factory in Vushtrri

”I believe that Kosovo will be welcomed into the family of the nations and that there will be many opportunities for the citizens of this country to prosper, raise big families and make their dreams come true.” (AFP)

More photos on Securing America.


May 25, 2006

Kosovo honors General Wesley Clark

And then there's Darfur... What's the score?

by Doris Lane, A Wes Clark Democrat

As noted, General Clark is in Kosovo this week, where he is honored as a hero of the Kosovar Albanian people. He was invited by Prime Minister Agim Ceku. According to Balkan Update, Clark will meet with government leaders, including President Fatmir Sejdiu, address the Kosovo Parliament, and confer with the Status Negotiation Group. General Clark strongly supports independence for Kosovo, with strong civil protections for the Kosovar Serb minority.

From Kosovareport

Clark, who made an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic nomination in the U.S. presidential elections, is considered a hero by the province's ethnic Albanians who want the province to become independent. He was reviled by many Serbs for his role during the bombing campaign.

Ahead of his visit, billboards were placed around the province's capital, Pristina, and local authorities in the western town of Djakovica named a road after him.

The U.N. is currently conducting talks aimed at steering ethnic Albanians and Serbian officials toward settling the final status of the province.

Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority wants independence, while Serbs want it to remain part of Serbia.

Let's face it, we shouldn't expect Serbians to be Clark fans, although there must be some, since I know one or two. But consider the fate of 1.5 million Kosovar Albanians who were saved from genocide on the verge of happening; and then look at Darfur.

As General Clark says in the Forward, in an interview with Jennifer Siegel as he was leaving for Kosovo:

"[Kosovo is] the perfect model for how the U.S. should be operating in world affairs. We provided leadership during the air campaign. In the aftermath, it was actually the Europeans who provided 80% of the forces, and the military leadership on the ground."

"This was really U.S. moral support and U.S. guidance," he added, "but not U.S. domination."

-more

Kosovo: 1.5. million living Albanians

v.

Sudan: 400,000 dead Darfuris

This is the score: Intervention works.

May 21, 2006

Wes Clark an inspirational leader; everything but a politician

When General Wesley Clark decided to run for the Democratic nomination in 2003 he was the Chairman and CEO of WaveCrest, a developer of hydrogen engines and electric bicycles. His supporters sometimes regret having pushed him out of a job he loved into primary hell, but as is shown by the book excerpts below, he did it for his country.

From Wesley K. Clark: A Biography by Antonia Felix:

Setting and some of the participants participants: Allen Andersson-MIT math; Boris Maslov-Moscow Institute, PH. D. electronics engineering; Joe Perry-Duquesne U, physicist; Wes Clark. lab at WaveCrest.

Subject: electromagnetic cores, battery chemistries, algorithms, power-to-energy ratios, and electric drivelines

The first meeting of the minds between Clark and WaveCrest was informal but intense. “I remember that day very clearly,” said Perry. “Our company was very small, we had this dream, and Wes said, ‘I’d like to just come out and the engineers and have you guys explain what you’re doing.’ So people sat around on the floor and we had pizza and a couple of beers and did equations on the whiteboard. And Wes was at home. He immediately connected with the science and the engineers.”

Allen Andersson, the principal investor and cofounder of WaveCrest, was astonished at the mathematical prowess and quick grasp of the new technology that Clark exhibited during that first meeting. “When it came to explaining what our company was doing, he understood it a lot better than I did,” Andersson said. “He thought that I was just being modest; but no, he understood it and I didn’t . I felt embarrassed because he went to West Point and learned how to march while I went to MIT and learned mathematics. He’s a guy that does all the practical things, he knows how to move vehicles from one place to another and make sure they have good drivers and fuel and the right number of rest stops; but he’s also right there on the theoretical science end of it.”

...Perry remarked that Clark had a down-to-earth relationship with everyone at the company. “He would walk around building and talk to the janitor and people running the switchboard; everybody was equally important to him. He has that genuine connection that only a few people could make.” ...According to Perry and other officers of the company, Clark had the ability to rally everyone and make morale soar. “Wes was really, in many respects, an inspirational leader,” said Perry.

...”Towards the end he was becoming really distracted,” said Joe Perry. “It was one thing to read in the papers about the rumors of him entering the race, but it was another thing to sit in the next office to him see what was going on. You could just see that it was tearing him up; he just thought that what we were doing was bad for the country.” To his coworkers, Clark’s ambition was not about politics but about problem solving. In their day-to-day talks with him about the war on terrorism and the bush administration’s environmental policies, they witnessed a genuine concern that was personal. “You read that he’s just another politician,” said Perry. “He’s kind of everything but.”

(excerpts from: Wesley K. Clark: A Biography, A. Felix, 177-88)

December 13, 2005

New England emergency communications conference

Clark is at Gilette Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts today, speaking to first responders. Pretty pricey stuff. On a somehow related note, my good friend Jai asks: "Wonder how Warner feels about his company sending Wes around the country?"

First Responders Attend Communications Conference

Conference Has Latest In Emergency Communications Concepts

FOXBORO, Mass. -- First responders from all over Southern New England came to Gilette Stadium in Foxboro on Tuesday to learn the latest in emergency communications concepts.

The conference was held by Sprint.

"I think we've made real progress in preventing," Gen. Wesley Clark said. "I think we’ve got a lot to do yet in responding."

Continue reading "New England emergency communications conference" »

December 7, 2005

Clark in China - Witt in profile

I wish I knew what he was up to in China, but I don't. I only know because of a Hill profile yesterday about Clark's business partner James Lee Witt.

In the eye of a storm, James Lee Witt is a calm and highly lucrative presence

By Jonathan E. Kaplan

-snip

Last year, at Clinton’s suggestion, Witt formed a business partnership with retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who had just run a losing bid for the Democratic nomination for president, and former Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater, a lobbyist at Patton Boggs, Clark said in a phone interview from China.

“We want to provide a full-spectrum response to businesses and governments, a complete range of services,” Clark said, adding that the firm has advised the Cayman Islands and several California-based companies on security issues. The firm has expanded so quickly that it moved into a new downtown office this fall.

-snip

“He is nonpartisan, he’s very experienced and he listens,” Clark said. “He’s low-key and just a really good guy.”

-more

November 13, 2005

Clark on Fox: Counter-Spinning, the art of

"I've been trying to analyze Clark's ability to counter spin," writes Deborah at News Hounds. "Part of it is emotional detachment allowing him to fix blame without passing judgement. He hands out the truth, defines the problem and offers a solution. Howard Dean has the same gift. Just imagine if either of them were in the White House right now?'

It doesn't bear thinking, Deborah.

Feh. Ptooey.

The News Hounds report:

Wes Clark: Intelligence Was Hyped

Wesley Clark, obviously an efficient time manager, wasted none softening his statements to Kiran Chetry on Fox & Friends this morning. He wasn't about to let the FOX spinmeisters help Bush avoid responsibility again. After Chetry asked him to respond to the charges Bush made against Democrats yesterday, Clark answered with total calm and conviction. "Bush has a lot to answer for. The intelligence was hyped."

Continue reading "Clark on Fox: Counter-Spinning, the art of" »