[Peace-discuss] CLARK

Ken Urban kurban at parkland.edu
Fri Jan 16 13:21:45 CST 2004


>Clark also proposed a $40 billion Homeland Economic Security Fund to
create 
>new jobs ``that will immediately improve our security.''

Remember when "Jobs Programs" actually rebuilt decaying infrastructure.
 Apparently half of us will spy on the other half of us, paid for by
everyone's taxes.  I can think of better things to base an economy on,
maybe the us should start growing poppies for export to create so real
industries.

Ken

>>> <Dlind49 at aol.com> 1/16/2004 10:40:41 AM >>>
and the shark shows his teeth.  



Clark Proposes Anti - Terror Role for NATO
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 
Filed at 11:08 p.m. ET

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- Democratic presidential candidate Wesley Clark
accused 
rival Howard Dean of ``old time politics'' on Wednesday for labeling
him a 
Republican. Closing the gap with Dean in New Hampshire, Clark also
proposed a new 
role for NATO in tracking down international terrorists such as Osama
bin 
Laden.

``George Bush still hasn't finished the job he started,'' said the
retired 
Army general.

Clark sought to make the most of recent gains in polls showing him
moving 
within striking distance of front-runner Dean.

Reflecting the tightening race, Dean accused Clark of being a
Republican at 
heart who once raised money for the Republican party.

Clark said he was flattered by the new attention.

But he told reporters after a national security speech, ``I'm a
Democrat.'' 
He added that, if he won the nomination, he would bring ``a lot of
others'' 
into the party's fold.

Clark, who has been drawing larger crowds at campaign stops across the
state 
in recent days, outlined a plan he said would improve homeland security
and 
the war on terror.

``Like many Americans, I've lost faith in our commander in chief,''
Clark 
said in prepared remarks. ``He has failed to lead effectively and
honestly. And, 
every day, Americans live at risk because of his failures.''

Clark vowed to ``take on terrorism, to stomp out the al-Qaida network,
and 
protect America at home and abroad.''

His plan would broaden the scope of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization to 
``help focus worldwide anti-proliferation efforts,'' said Clark, a
former 
NATO supreme commander who ran the war in Kosovo.

He proposed a NATO ``counterterrorism strike force'' that would also
include 
Arab, African and Asian troops. ``The strike force's No. 1 mission will
be to 
seek out, capture and destroy al-Qaida operatives and their
associates,'' he 
said.

Clark also proposed a $40 billion Homeland Economic Security Fund to
create 
new jobs ``that will immediately improve our security.''

Clark has suggested that the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks could have
been 
prevented, and has accused Bush of being too preoccupied with getting
Iraq's 
Saddam Hussein to do enough to hunt down bin Laden.

Spending most of the week in New Hampshire while most of his rivals
toiled in 
Iowa, Clark was gaining on Dean, according to several private and
independent 
polls. Some showed the former Vermont governor's once formidable lead
of 
around 25 percent at the start of the year down to high single digits.

David Corbin, a political science professor at the University of New 
Hampshire, said Clark could even overtake Dean.

``You see an amazing number of Clark signs going up. His crowds are
doubling 
and tripling. Many people in the Dean camp are now wavering,'' Corbin
said.

He compared Clark's surge to that enjoyed in the final days of the 2000
GOP 
primary by Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who went on to win the primary,

although he later lost the nomination to George W. Bush.

A poll by the Boston Herald published on Wednesday showed Dean's lead 
shrinking to 9 percentage points. Another poll, by the American
Research Group, Inc., 
showed Dean with 32 percent support and Clark with 22 percent in the 
three-day period that ended Tuesday. Clark, already strong among men,
has been gaining 
support among older women.

Mo Elleithee, a Clark spokesman, said the polls reflected ``forward 
movement'' that was welcome. Still, he cautioned, ``polls are
volatile,'' especially in 
New Hampshire, in the final days before a primary election. ``It's not
going 
to change the way we do business,'' he said.

The tightening of the New Hampshire race has injected new energy into
Clark's 
campaign and prompted Dean, the former governor of Vermont, to revise
his 
strategy.

Dean, locked in a close four-way fight in Iowa, attacked Clark directly

during a campaign stop in New Hampshire, before heading back to Iowa.

``I think General Clark is a good guy, but I truly believe he's a
Republican. 
I do. Harry Truman once said if you run a Republican against a
Republican, 
the Republican's going to win every time,'' Dean said.

``Look, I don't mean offense to General Clark. He is a good guy. And I
don't 
mind that he voted for Nixon and Reagan. That was a long time ago,''
Dean 
said. ``What bothers me is he went out and raised money for the
Republican Party 
and said great things about Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and George
Bush.''

Asked about Dean's comments, Clark said, ``It's old time politics.
That's all 
it is.''

Clark is not competing in the kickoff Iowa caucuses on Jan. 19, instead

focusing much of his energy and attention on New Hampshire's Jan. 27
primary.

Clark himself has been drawing the kind of fire from rivals that in the
past 
had been aimed mainly at Dean. At issue are his position on Iraq, his
past 
votes for Republican President Reagan, and for recent comments on
abortion and 
the 2001 terror attacks.

In an interview last week with the Manchester Union Leader, Clark said
he 
opposed any restriction on abortion, even right up until the last day
of a 
pregnancy. He also said he would not appoint judges who oppose the
right to abortion.

``Life begins with the mother's decision,'' Clark said.

His statement drew condemnations from anti-abortion groups. His
campaign 
later suggested Clark had not intended to get into a debate over
timing.


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