I cannot imagine ever having any political leader as a role model John Wayne and Gregory Peck were mine.
Technically Clarke was not fired as Clinton says. More accurate would be to say he was demoted, sidelined and ignored, which is about the same as being fired, except he was still on the payroll.
When 9/11 happened, Clarke's skills and knowledge suddenly became more important. But he remained on the sidelines and had no real power or authority, like he did under Clinton.
-------------------------------------------------earth_as_one------------------------------------------------------
Clinton wanting FOX (much less any news outlet) to ask the Bush administration,
" Why did you fire Dick Clarke? I want to know…" is not only TECHNICALLY misleading,
but rather it is TOTALLY MISLEADING.
Nor was he demoted, and nor sidelined, and nor was he ignored any more than the Clintons who
mislead you into believing he had a top notch place in the sun in their administration, because there
are many including Clarke himself, who felt NEITHER administration was listening ENOUGH.
And this plan of Clinton's ? HIS PLAN ?
Oh well, let the partisan spin on both sides continue.
Clarke does damn both administrations. Read his book.
...One of the first official acts of the current Bush administration was to downgrade the office of national coordinator for counterterrorism on the National Security Council - a position held by Richard Clarke. Clarke had served in the Pentagon and State Department under presidents Reagan and Bush the elder, and was the first person to hold the counterterrorism job created by President Clinton. Under Clinton, he was elevated to cabinet rank, which gave him a seat at the principals' meeting, the highest decision-making group for national security.
By removing Clarke from the table, Bush put him in a box where he could speak only when spoken to. No longer would his memos go to the president; instead, they had to pass though a chain of command of national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and her deputy, Stephen Hadley, who bounced each of them back...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/september11/story/0,11209,1177418,00.html
Former President Bill Clinton goes on the offensive against Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace last weekend.
Fox News
Sept. 28, 2006, 9:58AM
Just what went on behind the scenes?
Chris Wallace tells about confrontational Clinton interview
By MIKE McDANIEL
Houston Chronicle
Friday will be a week since former President Bill Clinton's angry, finger-pointing reaction to Chris Wallace's questions about his record on fighting terrorism. It's a story that continues to have legs — which Wallace considers a compliment.
We talked briefly with the host of Fox News Sunday to find out more about what went on behind the scenes during the interview, which was taped Friday and telecast Sunday.
Q: Chris, are you tired of talking about this?
A: Yeah, I'm getting tired of me.
Q: There seems to be a consensus that the interview did Clinton some good. What's your take?
A: I'm not in the business of doing the former president good or harm. I'm just doing my job, which is to ask questions.
Given the fact that we got our largest audience in the last three years, I think we did some good for the show and showed what we are all about, which is asking tough questions of both sides.
Q: But have the Clinton spinmeisters been at work?
A: Oh, absolutely. The Clinton spin machine is in full-wash cycle right now. They've portrayed this like he had planned it and had set a trap.
The fact is that, during the interview — and I was sitting with the (former) president, and he was genuinely angry, his emotions were somewhat out of control — things were happening off-camera. As (Clinton) went off, his press secretary was jabbing my producer in the shoulder, demanding the interview be ended and the cameras shut off.
After the interview, you could hear him yelling at his staff in the hallway for getting him into this situation. Preplanned?
I think not.
Q: Are you surprised that the interview wasn't ended?
A: When the cameras are rolling, it's hard for a politician to get up and walk out; they know it's not going to make them look particularly good. I think he had some things he wanted to get off his chest.
I was grateful he chose to do so on Fox News Sunday.
Q: Was it difficult for you to stay calm and civil?
A: No. There were three things going on. On the first level of consciousness, I was just astonished at the outpouring of emotion and anger. Sometimes amid the brilliant and cogent arguments, conspiracy theories were flowing out of the president. On another level, I'm thinking, how should I respond? I was thinking don't let him run over you and don't fight with him. I think I succeeded at both. And on a third level, I'm thinking I've got a hell of a story here.
Q: What are you hearing from colleagues and friends?
A: The response has been amazing. The public response continues to build. Even among colleagues and friends. They know I'm a straight newsman. This talk of right-wing is foolishness. Those who are familiar with me and Fox News Sunday know I ask probing questions of both sides. And secondly, that people felt I handled it about right, that I stayed professional and didn't try to get in a fight. My feeling is if you've asked a question and you're getting a good answer, don't interrupt it. I was getting a great answer.
Q: Have you heard from your father (newsman Mike Wallace)?
A: I have, and he thinks I did great and that the former president lost it.
Q: Have you heard from Clinton since?
A: No.
Q: Did you leave things in a bad way?
A: I wouldn't say so. He was ready to get up. He was still reeling from this outburst.
I didn't go into this interview wanting to get in a fight with him, and I didn't want to be in a fight with him. I tried to say to him that the last thing I was trying to do was to provoke him. But he was not to be mollified. He was angry. It wasn't unpleasant; he didn't stomp off.
He was upset, and he stayed that way.
Q: Is this the most combative or contentious interview you ever had?
A: Probably not. I've been an investigative reporter for years. We would track down crooks and confront them. I've had angrier or more unpleasant interviews, but never with a former president of the United States.
Q: Who should play you on the inevitable Saturday Night Live parody?
A: That's a good question. I would be happy to play myself.
mike.mcdaniel@chron.com
...The Guardian's source are the Clintons themselves.
Try looking at some of Clarke's criticisms of the Clinton way.
Clarke being at the table is subterfuge. He was at the table if Clinton wanted it.
And the quantity and quality of attention towards Clarke requires further evaluation,
and requires more empirical evidence, doesn't it ???
For some reason the CIA was demoted under Clinton, with far fewer perhaps just
two face visits.
And by the way, it IS THE PEROGATIVE of the President to lift up or lower whatever
piece of the staid bureaucracy they choose. Clinton hardly looking at the CIA chief's face
and Bush having much more contact with the CiA head is an example.
Clinton trumpeting and overblowing the power of Clarke is politics aimed at partisans, begging
for more suspicious analysis.
This is the beating breast rhetoric.
Further analysis.
What is true is plenty of mistakes to go around in both administrations.
One better than the other ???
I DON'T THINK SO.
This is just silly. Neither the Brady Bill nor the Assault weapons bill had a thing to do with "automatic weapons", and it was ALREADY illegal for the persons you describe to possess weapons.So what if Clinton wanted to make it harder for Americans with violent criminal records and mental problems to acquire automatic weapons.
No, the intent of the Second Amendment is to allow the population at large to be armed in such a way as to make their oppression with impunity impossible.It was never the intent of the second amendment to facilitate armed robbery and incidents like Columbine.
At least Clinton didn't blatantly violate these other ammendments:
Amendment 4 - Search and Seizure
Amendment 5 - Trial and Punishment, Compensation for Takings
Amendment 6 - Right to Speedy Trial, Confrontation of Witnesses
Amendment 8 - Cruel and Unusual Punishment
Bush is trying to push the world into taking action in Darfur......the USA is a little busy elsewhere.........One valid point. Clinton ignored Rwanda and he should be hung out to dry on that one. How do you feel about Bush's handling of the genocide in Darfur?
I didn't say rape, I said "sexual assault". There is a difference. A big one.Regarding the allegation of rape: Does it make sense that a women would maintain a friendship with Clinton, use him as a reference and write letters to him describing herself as Clinton's number one fan after he raped her? No doubt Clinton had a long list of extramarital affairs. I find it difficult to believe that someone as smooth talking as Clinton would have a hard time convincing women to have sex with him, let alone resort to rape, but I suppose that's possible. Still as far as I know Clinton has never been convicted of rape. More likely Clinton is guilty of convincing women to do things sexually they later regretted. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. Obviously some of Clinton's actions in his personal life were immoral, but immoral isn't the same as illegal.