SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (27519)2/2/2004 9:43:58 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793707
 
Jim Geraghty is a good investigative reporter. I suspect this is as close to the truth about Clark as we will get.

February 02, 2004, 8:57 a.m.
An Army of One
Why Wes Clark's coworkers hated him.

— Jim Geraghty, a reporter with States News Service in Washington, is a frequent contributor to NRO and a commentator on London's ITN News.

It appears that Wesley Clark's political career will be remembered as one of those inexplicable and regrettable momentary fads, like flash mobs, the XFL, or Tickle-Me-Elmo. Or New Coke, although even that syrupy misstep probably could have gotten more than 13 percent in New Hampshire.

So there's less need to understand why Clark was so hated by so many people he worked with in the Army than when he was a potential viable candidate. Nonetheless, Clark is, at press-time, ahead in Oklahoma — he could still add himself to the list of media-hyped Comeback Kids of this interminable primary; so the opinions of those who worked closest with Clark.

Interviews with a wide variety of current and retired military officials reveal that Clark was disliked by only three groups: Those whom ranked above him in the chain of command whom he ignored, his peers at the same rank whom he lied to, and those serving beneath him whom he micromanaged. Other than that, everyone liked him.

The simplest, most likely reason for the scathing, if vague, criticisms of Clark from former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Henry Hugh Shelton and Defense Secretary William Cohen, is this: As NATO commander, Wesley Clark had problems with the Pentagon's chain of command. When Clark's bosses didn't agree with him, he just went around them.

Shelton's and Cohen's views on Kosovo were often diametrically opposed to Clark's. But the Pentagon didn't speak with one voice to the White House, because Clark kept going behind his superiors' backs and proposing ideas to National Security Advisor Sandy Berger and Secretary of State Madeline Albright.

Today, Clark insists he never went around the chain of command. He argues that his job as NATO commander was a "two-hatted" position, partly a U.S. military role and partly a diplomatic post, leading the 19-nation coalition. He contends the latter role required him to assist the secretary of state and other White House officials.

But most of the Pentagon believed Clark crossed a line.

"He should not have been going to Sandy Berger and Madeline Albright," said retired Gen. Thomas McInerney, who nonetheless agrees the Kosovo military action was the right course. "This chain of command was to the secretary of defense and to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. That was the loyalty issue and the integrity issue. His job should have been to convince his U.S. military leaders the value of going into Kosovo... That's where he lost an awful lot of respect."

"He forgot that the national-command authority included the secretary of defense," said one retired defense official who worked with Clark. "He saw himself as having a direct line to the White House. Clark had his own point of view. He knew, in his heart, he was in tune with what Madeline Albright and Bill Clinton and the White House wanted, and he pushed it. The secretary of defense and chairman of the Joint Chiefs didn't agree, but he decided he didn't really have to listen to them."

HOW TO LOSE FRIENDS AND ALIENATE PEERS: LIE
While Clark could charm certain secretaries of defense and chairmen of the joint chiefs, the Army itself evidently didn't think as highly of him. Clark's last three assignments were as head of strategic plans on the Joint Staff; commander in chief of U.S. Southern Command; and the SACEUR post. In none of the three was he the nominee of his own service.

One reason for the distrust came in 1994, when retired Army Lt. Gen. Marc Cisneros, competed with Clark for a four-star position heading U.S. Southern Command — leading U.S. forces in South and Central America — and lost.

Cisneros was the Army's top choice for the job, and seemed like an ideal candidate: a Spanish speaker who had taken Manuel Noriega into custody in 1990 when the Panamanian leader surrendered to U.S. troops. Clark, in contrast, speaks Russian and had never held a Latin American post.

Cisneros claims "very high sources in the Army" told him that Clark was angling for the job, and had sought help from his fellow former Little Rock resident, Bill Clinton.

"I said, 'Well, I know Wes Clark, I'll go ask him,'" Cisneros said. "I got in touch with him and said, 'Wes, I heard you're bucking for this position.' He said, 'No, absolutely not. It's yours for the taking.'"

Within weeks, Clinton had nominated Clark. Cisneros concluded that Clark had "lied to [his] face."

Since hitting the campaign trail, Clark has declined to respond directly to Cisneros's charge, but he told Time magazine, "People are entitled to their own opinions. The Army and the armed forces are very competitive institutions."

Anonymous Clark aides have suggested that Cisneros' public criticism is just bitterness over coming in second.

"I'm not worried about that position," Cisneros said. "I've been president of a university [Texas A&M-Kingsville], a CEO. I don't worry about what's gonna happen. I've just never run across a fellow officer who outright lied to me. In the military code of ethics, the way I was raised, one military man does not lie to another. Clark is a snake in the grass. He is a one-eyed jack — you see one eye, but he's got another eye that you don't see. There's a whole side of him you don't see."

"His reputation at Fort Hood was that he was overly ambitious," says one retired army official who worked with Clark more than once. "He would stab anybody around him in the back if they threatened his career.... He didn't relate to most of the men around him. He's got a factor about him that causes him to be distrusted by many of his military peers."

Apparently, Clark's reputation in the military hasn't improved since his retirement. In an article a year ago in The Washington Monthly, Clark recalled how he visited the Pentagon soon after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, offering suggestions on the war against terrorists.

"We read your book," on Kosovo, Clark wrote that he was told. "And no one is going to tell us where we can or can't bomb."

KOSOVO: HOW NOT TO LEAD A WAR
The most devastating criticism of Clark's Kosovo war management comes from RAND research institute report, "Disjointed War: Military Operations in Kosovo, 1999." The review paints Clark as a leader in nearly-constant conflict with the officers directly under him, the micromanaging boss from hell:
Even in the case of fixed infrastructure targets, Clark reportedly would venture deep into the most minute details of the target list. "Let's turn to target number 311," Clark would say, by this account "opening his binder as other participants flipped to the proper page, as if they were holding hymnals." He would then raise questions about a target's relevance, expostulate on allied sensitivities, or abort attacks already in progress. He would also, by this account, sometimes gainsay his own intelligence experts and targeteers by looking at a particular DMPI [designated mean point of impact] placement and asking "Isn't that an apartment building?" or "Can't we move that DMPI over 100 feet?" At which point Short would be seen "slumping back in his chair, folding his arms in disgust, and mentally checking out." ... By this informed account, it was never clear to participants whether Clark, through such ex cathedra interventions, was genuinely responding to political pressure from above or was engaged in a divide-and-rule game by playing on putative "constraints" to his advantage and gathering diverse inputs and opinions until he heard the one he wanted to hear.
Clark's system of having himself, an army general, managing the air campaign broke dramatically from the American system in other previous conflicts. In the Bosnia campaign in 1995, then-SACEUR Army Gen. George Joulwan left the day-to-day responsibilities for the air campaign to Navy Adm. Leighton Smith in order to focus on diplomatic duties. Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, on the eve of Desert Storm, put his faith in the air campaign strategy drawn up in the Air Force's then-Lt. Gen. Charles Horner's.

After weeks of seemingly fruitless bombing, the Clark strategy of focusing on Serbian forces in the field ("tank-plinking") was dropped and the campaign focused on targets in Belgrade important to Milosevic. The RAND report concluded, "The majority of the combat sorties that SACEUR [Clark] insisted be devoted to finding and attacking enemy forces in the [Kosovo Engagement Zone] arguably entailed a waste of munitions and other valuable assets."

Recall, Clark's strongest point as a candidate — perhaps his sole qualification — is the perception that he is a strong leader who knows how to manage a war.

HAVE FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES
After being so distrusted by his colleagues, one might wonder how Clark kept getting promoted and having such glowing performance reviews. In 1993, President Clinton asked the Army's chief of staff if he knew "my friend, Wes Clark." In Clark's words, they were more acquaintances, two overachieving young men from Arkansas, two years apart, whose paths crossed every few years.

Now, being perceived as a buddy of President Don't Ask Don't Tell could hurt Clark as much as help him in the Pentagon. But when defense officials needed to fill a slot with a man acceptable to the Clinton White House, they knew who to call.

"It's clear to me he was very much playing to the Clinton administration with an eye to getting that fourth star," says one retired defense official.

"I'm very confident he was selected because of his relationship with Clinton," Cisneros says.

Clinton wasn't Clark's only powerful friend. He also was a rare military media darling. An Esquire article in the late 1970s called him "probably the most brilliant junior officer now on active duty," while a 1981 Washington Post Magazine piece declared the young Clark "the best the Army has to offer. He approaches the ideal, the perfect modern officer." According to the Los Angeles Times, Clark was quoted more in major newspapers and broadcasts than any other military officer between 1998 and 2000. He was mentioned in more than 300 New York Times stories, while Shelton was mentioned in 24.

It is worth recalling that every one of Clark's peers, no matter how much they disdain him, acknowledge that he is a smart guy. And his service to his country is nothing but commendable. But one of Clark's former colleagues summed up his conflicted feelings about Clark thus: "He's got unequaled strengths in intellect, and weaknesses in ambition. The question is, does the ambition get so blinding that it gets in the way of his intellect?"

nationalreview.com



To: Lane3 who wrote (27519)2/2/2004 9:50:30 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793707
 
This budget is outrageous. But the Dems would be worse. A classic case of "False Alternatives." Here is an article on a subject you know well, Karen.

February 02, 2004, 8:54 a.m.
Dependency Divas
Feminist groups are not the key to women's votes.
NRO
— Carrie L. Lukas, director of policy at the Independent Women's Forum, is the author of "Dependency Divas: How the Feminist Big Government Agenda Betrays Women", available at www.iwf.org.


The presidential primaries turn national this week, with states as diverse as New Mexico and Delaware voting to select their Democratic challenger. Contenders must swap the retail politics of Iowa and New Hampshire for a campaign to build national appeal. One group sure to be courted is women. Yet for advice about how to appeal to them, candidates should look beyond the self-proclaimed feminist groups. These dependency divas sell a tired mix of victimization and big government that's out of touch with most modern women.

But don't take my word for it. In a recent interview, Martha Burke, chairman of the National Council of Women's Organizations, noted this discontent between the "movement" and most American women: "I think it's a little bit sad that some women are not aware of what the women's movement in general does for them, and some of the ways they're experiencing discrimination. It's my job to make them notice."

What's really sad is that Burke thinks awakening women's sense of victimization is a worthy goal. Most people rejoice that American women are too busy succeeding to feel wronged. Women are thriving in schools and universities, and excelling in industries that just a few decades ago were almost exclusively the domain of men. Cause for celebration? Not for Burke and the women's groups that feed on women's sense of victimization.

Yet Burke does make one important point: Women ought to take notice of "what the women's movement does." So what does it do? The National Organization for Women (NOW), one of the most prominent feminist groups, advocates for government-provided healthcare, steeply progressive taxes, and more regulations of how businesses compensate employees. NOW fights Social Security reforms that give workers control over more of their retirement savings, and education policies that empower parents. Seemingly, NOW envisions a nanny government that provides for most of women's needs — the clear implication being that women are incapable of caring for themselves.

NOW's view is hardly novel. Throughout much of history, society assumed that women required economic support. Women were their father's property until they married, at which time they became their husband's charge. Early feminists fought this notion and for the right for women to live and compete on their own.

The modern feminist agenda steps back from the promotion of independence for women. Instead, it offers an agenda that replaces dependence on men with dependence on government.

Adding injury to insult, the big-government policies many feminist organizations promote often have unintended consequences harmful to women. Workplace regulations make hiring more expensive and job opportunities scarce. High marginal taxes discourage some married women from entering the workforce, while forcing others who would prefer to stay home with children to go to work to pay the bills.

Self-proclaimed feminists often use explicitly paternalistic arguments to justify their political and economic agendas. Consider the following statement of the Feminist Majority Foundation, arguing against the 2001 tax-cut package: "The economic well-being of women in the United States is severely threatened by President Bush's tax cut proposal...women have little to gain and everything to lose from this plan."

Allowing women to keep more of their money and reducing government's take of the economy is portrayed as economic Armageddon for women. The Feminist Majority Foundation suggests that women — not just low-income women or disabled women, but women generally — so depend on the government to provide for them that their "economic well-being" was "severely threatened" by a tax cut.

So Martha Burke is right. Women need to know what the modern women's movement does. The most prominent women's groups have hijacked a once-honorable campaign for true equality and independence for women, draining it of its intellectual force and leaving only a husk of tired, big-government policies. In doing so, they spread an image of women as helpless children, dependent on government to care for them.

These dependency divas aren't serving women's best interests. The only ones truly dependent are the women's groups themselves — dependent upon the perpetuation of a sense of victimization. Candidates who want to appeal to mainstream women shouldn't assume these groups speak for most women. Women are better served by limited government and expanded spheres of personal freedom and choice. Candidates that recognize that will do more than win endorsements from women's groups — they'll win the support of women themselves.

nationalreview.com



To: Lane3 who wrote (27519)2/2/2004 11:16:32 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793707
 
Different look at "Outsourcing."

Outsourcing

I've hesitated to write about this subject because [gasp] I work for an outsourcing company. We operate copy centers, fax centers and mailrooms for large law firms. We're a small fish in a big pond. Our competition is the copier manufacturers, Xerox, Pitney Bowes, Ikon, Danka. All of them have subsidiaries that do what we do. There are companies like Archer, with expertise in operating records centers, and loads of others just in our market. It's all outsourcing.
Outsourcing is when someone who works for another company does a job that your employer used to or could have paid a fellow employee to do.

Most outsourced jobs don't go to India. They stay right here in the good, old U.S.A. That clerk from Accountemps or secretary from Kelly. That RN at your hospital. The cleaning crew in your office. Outsourced jobs.

That's why I worry as the rants go on and on about the evils of outsourcing. For the few jobs that go overseas, the correction potentially stands to bite a whole bunch of good people here in the United States.

Most outsourcing is done in the United States and Americans work for outsourcing firms.

The discussion is about outsourcing jobs overseas. I see many conservatives and libertarians abandoning their principles here to oppose the transfer of any jobs overseas.

"Good" jobs are being sent overseas. "Good" is code for high paying jobs. And the hidden yet primary argument is that Americans deserve to have high paying jobs, no matter what the circumstances.

I understand unions pushing this point, but I don't understand the many conservatives and libertarians who are. Job entitlement is not a conservative nor a libertarian position. And that is what the argument about outsourcing overseas boils down to; "we" are entitled to those jobs.

Why should an employer be forced to pay higher wages to Americans? That's the crux of the issue. The solution to the outsourcing "problem" is government action. There is no other possible solution that would meet the demands of outsourcing opponents. Conservatives and libertarians cannot support this without abandoning their free market beliefs. It's very European to believe that the employee sets his value to the employer. But that's not the way it works in the United States. The employee doesn't get to decide what the job is worth.

The market should determine the effectiveness of any outsourcing solution that an employer may elect. If it makes the company more profitable and more successful, it works. If it does not, the company will change or die.

Outsourcing is a solution because it works. It allows companies to focus on core business while outsourcing firms with expertise in non-core areas handle them. A law firm administrator shouldn't have to worry about toner in the copier or the mailroom employee who didn't come in to work. That's the key to outsourcing and that's why it's so wildly successful. Companies that don't outsource for this reason will find out, in the marketplace. You don't outsource your core and be successful. Let the market handle this conflict, not the government.

-- posted by Chuck at Monday, February 02, 2004 | E-mail -- Permalink

blog.simmins.org



To: Lane3 who wrote (27519)2/4/2004 3:18:59 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793707
 
Here's your "Safire" fix. Back to "Nixon in Purgatory."

OP-ED COLUMNIST
The View From Purgatory
By WILLIAM SAFIRE

Reached on his picture-taking cellphone in Purgatory, where he is halfway through expiating his price-control sin, Richard M. Nixon — winner of innumerable primary elections — agreed to a brief interview with his former speechwriter.

Q: What's your reading of the results of yesterday's round of primaries?

RN: Southern charm sells in South Carolina. I like this Edwards; he's a helluva salesman of the old Truman "special interests" line. And his victory speech was straight out of Jesse Jackson's convention rouser. Edwards was willing to roll the dice, too, saying he had to win that first Southern primary or he was finished. Gutsy.

Q: But doesn't he seem a little young to run for president?

RN: He's 50, three years older than I was when I ran against Kennedy in '60.

Q: What's his vulnerability?

RN: Slick lawyer. Beat $25 million for himself out of doctors and hospitals in malpractice suits, and that money came out of average families' pockets in the form of higher insurance premiums. That, plus the trial lawyers' lobby, bought and paid for him on tort reform. Some oppo research could rough him up a bit, but not enough to kill his chances.

Q: Not inexperience?

RN: I'd hate to see him in a room with Putin, and Chirac would eat him for lunch. But even if Edwards doesn't make it, he's a slam-dunk for running mate. And if the Democratic ticket loses, all the exposure — and the national experience — would make him a natural to take on Hillary for the top spot next time. He's a comer.

Q: You're certain, then, that Kerry has the nomination in the bag?

RN: He got up off the floor and made a good comeback, and I like the comeback story, as you know. And last night, Kerry won big in Missouri, where the delegates are. Picking up delegates is like washing dishes by hand — one by one, state by state till you have the magic number and the nomination. Then the hell with 'em.

Q: How did Kerry manage to turn it around?

RN: You want me to say "electability" like all those jackasses yakkin' it up on cable. That's what Rockefeller tried on me, but only the hacks and the hot partisans put electability first. It's one element, but it can get loused up in fluctuating mano a mano polls, and it vanishes as an asset when the election campaign begins. No, Kerry came back because he's an homme serioux — that's French for a man with gravitas — which is what people want, and it doesn't matter that he has a face like a horse.

Q: What happened to Howard Dean?

RN: Dean fell in love with his early press clips and the clapping of the antiwar bunch, but he couldn't take the heat and blew it. I feel for him in a way — all those pretty-face media types kissing your ring when you're flying high, and then the minute you stumble, they smell blood and turn on you like a wolf pack. But put my media feeling on deep background — it's something I'm supposed to be expiating.

Q: After losing everywhere last night, can Dean come back?

RN: If he could get Kerry to debate one on one, sure. But Kerry's no dope. Never debate when you're ahead.

Q: Who would win in a televised Kerry-Bush debate?

RN: Kerry on debating points, but Bush on personality, optimism and all that stuff that Kennedy and Reagan had down pat. But Edwards would lose to Cheney — against a steady hand, there's such a thing as too much charisma.

Q: Will the dominant issue in the campaign be jobs or Iraq or health care?

RN: You forget the Quemoy-Matsu syndrome. What decides a close race is how candidates react to an October surprise. What if bin Laden is caught, or "Dr. Germs" spills the beans about Iraqi anthrax, or our casualties continue? What about a White House scandal, or some revelation about a candidate's liberalism, or an accident or a heart attack? What if the market falls out of bed or there's a terrorist attack or the Chinese move on Quemoy and Matsu?

Q: Yes — what if?

RN: Most crises help incumbents.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company