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Gen. Clark has NOT said that he isn't running...

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MalloyLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:44 AM
Original message
Gen. Clark has NOT said that he isn't running...
Neil Cavuto: Well, are you running? Are you going to run?


GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: -is about that communication. Well, I haven't made a decision on that yet. I haven't said I won't run, but for me it's about the message. I'm very concerned about where this country's heading-

http://securingamerica.com/node/2168
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Avalux Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:48 AM
Response to Original message
1. No he hasn't.
I expect Clark will run and after entering the race late in 2004 (which he admits was a huge mistake) is being very careful about timing. He's waiting for the appropriate moment and I think the biggest factor - the message - is Iraq. He's clearly someone who could get us out of that mess and it will be the centerpiece of his platform. He can't wait too long though.
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Texas_Kat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:50 AM
Response to Original message
2. AND there is this:
Start: Feb 2 2007-Feb 4 2007 : General Clark will be speaking at the DNC Winter Meeting. The Winter Meeting is scheduled for 2/2 through 2/4 at the Washington Hilton.

Should be interesting
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Tom Rinaldo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:10 AM
Response to Reply #2
10. And also this:
Jan 27 2007 - 6:00pm

General Clark will be speaking at the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee’s 3rd Annual “Turn Nevada Blue Dinner”

Saturday, January 27, 2007 Carson Valley Inn, Shannon Ballroom 1627 US HWY 395N, Minden 89423

Private Cocktail Reception
with Potential Presidential Candidates 6:00pm
Preferred Dinner Seating $150 per person

~ Special Guests~
Governor Bill Richardson
General Wesley K. Clark (RET)

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crispini Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:51 AM
Response to Original message
3. I like Clark.
I will have a tough time deciding, if my #1 does not want to run.

What is his stance on global warming?
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Avalux Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:02 AM
Response to Reply #3
6. Here's a couple of links -
he's a member of the stopglobalwarming.org virtual march -

http://www.stopglobalwarming.org/sgw_marcher.asp?2724

(check out the top 10 marchers)

and you can listen to a podcast on the subject here -

http://www.awesclarkdemocrat.com/2006/04/clark_global_warming_is_a_nati.htm

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Tom Rinaldo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:05 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. Clark's stand on Global Warming is Excellent
From the Clinton Global Initiative Conference:
(reposted with permission from SecuringAmerica.com)
http://securingamerica.com/node/1172

"Promoting Prosperity with Climate Change Policy"

Climate Change Policy in the United States
September 16, 2005

PRESIDENT JOSÉ MARÍA FIGUERES: General Clark, your leadership is widely recognized in many, many fields, and of course one in which you are an absolute expert is in the field of national security. What are the linkages between climate change and national security? And if we were to continue on the course on which we now are, what would be the unintended consequences in terms of a national security policy?

WESLEY GENERAL WESLEY CLARK: Well, thank you very much for the question, President Figueres. Let me just say how pleased I am to be here in this group and on this panel, especially with Senator Clinton. We go back to the 1980s in talking about the Mediterranean Basin. And I remember ecological discussions there.

But President Figueres and I ... when you were the President of Costa Rica and I was the Commander in Chief for the Southern Command (1996-97), we had a conference down in Bariloche, Argentina. And I flew down on an aircraft one afternoon with Senator Bob Graham and his wife. And we flew down the ... we landed in Peru, we refueled and we flew down the coast. And we looked at the Andes Mountains from the west as the sun was setting. It was absolutely spectacular.

And you know, the Andes are very, very high. Much higher than the Rockies. They're 18, 19, 22,000 foot peaks. And then, we noticed that most of these peaks had no snowfall. None. And we were just coming out of the southern hemisphere's winter. And that's when I first began to take very seriously the discussions of global warming. Because before you see it, it looks academic.

We were at conferences. We went around South America which seems to have been affected more quickly, even than North America. And we learned about the impact of global warming and the ozone hole and the ultraviolet radiation in places like Uruguay, where people were warned not to be on the beach during daylight, during noon, between 11 and 2 p.m., because of extreme ultraviolet due to the movement of the ozone hole over Uruguay.

And when you see these things, you realize that man made conditions do impact the environment and how we live. So I take global warming very seriously. And if you look at all the scientific projections on where it's headed, you have to view the consequences of it as potentially so severe, it has to be considered a national security problem. There's just no other way to deal with it.

And we've probably discussed this in previous panels, but there are two possible scenarios. There's a gradual change and there's the abrupt change scenario. But one of those two scenarios is almost certain to happen, because carbon stays suspended in the atmosphere for a hundred years or more. And so even if the United States right now were to adopt to something akin to Kyoto, we would have the effects with us and carried forward for a century or more.

So global warming is not likely to be reversed ... the question is, through the right policies, can we slow its pace? Can we cause it to be more gradual and can we avoid an abrupt climate change which results in something like the thermohaline circulating current in the North Atlantic shutting down and plunging western Europe into much colder and dryer weather conditions?

So whether you subscribe to the slow and gradual model or the abrupt change model, there are profound implications that you can see coming our way. And I look at three of them. First of all, there's displacement. If water levels rise in the gradual model over the next hundred years by less than a meter, a hundred million people living in low lying areas around the world are going to have to move. They're going to be affected.

And if you consider that the rise in ocean temperatures with global warming affects the severity of storms, then you get some appreciation that it's much more severe than simply gradually each year, the water goes up a half inch. These are catastrophic storm potentials the likes of which we're just starting to experience. So Katrina would be not a once in a hundred years storm, but a once in five years storm. And it wouldn't be just on the gulf coast of the United States. It could be in the Pacific. It could be in southeast Asia or elsewhere. So it's the displacement of people.

Gradual warming also means that rainfall patterns change. So the Pacific northwest gets drier. In Alaska, there are forest fires. Agriculture suffers. People can't ... especially in the lesser developed countries, they can sustain the traditional living patterns. They're going to move. So populations shift and move. That causes national security concerns for governments.

Then beyond the displacements, you have the potential for these catastrophes like Katrina. Now, we had to pull troops out of Iraq to come home to help. National Guard troops. And it wasn't just the numbers of the troops. It was these two brigades, Mississippi and Louisiana brigades ... those brigades had practiced for the kinds of civil emergencies that actually occurred, and then they were in Iraq, so the state didn't have their leadership.

It wasn't can you produce another 4,000 troops. You could have. But you couldn't produce the command control and the experienced leadership that had been through this. So when you have a catastrophe, the first thing you need is command and control. And that command and control is extraordinary. It's not what you have every day in place because nations can't afford it. And the place you get it is from the armed forces.

And you need manpower. And you can't have standing levees of people who are waiting for disasters. At least we haven't found it affordable to do so. And the place where you get them, then is the National Guard and the reserves. And this impacts national security.

And if you want to do this right in the recovery from a catastrophe, you have to prepare for it and practice for it and exercise for it. And so it means you've got to devote the same kind of attention to this response that in the Cold War, we might have had the President and the Secretary of Defense exercising what would happen if there was a sudden alert and there was a warning that Russian missiles were on the way to the United States.

Wouldn't it have been better if President Bush and the Homeland Security Secretary and the Secretary of Defense and maybe the Secretary of State had sat together and presented this scenario and run through these experiences, and say, "Well, how do we get in touch? How do we call the Governor? Watt does the Governor need? How do we know how much the Governor needs? How does the Governor know that? How do we communicate with him? How many hotlines do we have? Does it need to be secure? What public affairs pronouncements do we have?"

This all has to be worked out not on paper in advance by young staff people. It has to be worked out by experienced leaders who are going through practical exercises. It's the way we built the United States Armed Forces, the Department of Defense. It's the way we do our planning for national security. And what I'm suggesting is if we don't do this in preparation for climactic catastrophes like Katrina, we're always going to be disturbed by the response. It takes the right organization and structure and it takes dedicated exercise. And you can't get it unless you call it a national security problem. And the third thing ... and it is a national security problem, because it takes national security resources.

And the third thing, of course, is as a consequence of global warming, whether it's gradual or abrupt, you will change agriculture. You'll change fisheries. You'll change water flows. Nations will find they have different resources available. And those resource needs and migrant flows and other things will cause tensions and changes in alliances and border controls and problems and issues.

So we've got to work these impacts of climate change as national security problems. I'm all in favor of trying to prevent climate change. But I guess the bottom line of my message would be that it's going to be with us no matter how much we do. We can ameliorate the impact, but we've got to start right now thinking about it. And so you've got to promote sustainable development.

You've got to organize internationally so you can smooth out international flows. And you've got to take in the United States a national security approach to dealing with the consequences of climate change. Thank you."


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ArkySue Donating Member (647 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:08 AM
Response to Reply #3
8. Clark on global warming
Or more properly, global climate change. He's agin it.
Read more about Clark's thoughts here: http://securingamerica.com/taxonomy/term/74
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DaveinMD Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 10:54 AM
Response to Original message
4. he needs to decide soon
its already a crowded field and he needs to raise money.
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Phil C Donating Member (1 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:00 AM
Response to Original message
5. I think Clark will run
His coming meeting and debate with Richardson in Nevada. An invite to the Service Employees International Union executive board at Gallaudet Universitythen the March 6-7 National Security Conf, which he's hosting. Announces aroung the 12 or so, first democrat debate is in April, then there's the release of his next book he just finished writting "American Son".
This would be a good strategy for adding to a continual news vehicle for a Clark Campaign.
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Pithy Cherub Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:16 AM
Response to Reply #5
12. Welcome to DU Phil C!
Clark should wait and nobody knows how he is lining up fundraising potential being in California a great deal of time now. It also was pointed out in the book, Freakonomics, that the best financed candidates do not always win. Money is the thing the traditional hidebound media focuses upon and not actual boots on the ground. Secondly big donors can be rendered neutral by netroots fundraising in a short amount of time. People forget Jim Webb's campaign was virtually broke - and many of his frontline activists are Clarkies. Jessica Vandenburg, Webb's head of Netroots/Internet Outreach recently represented Clark at Hotline's Presidential Forum.

:hi:
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Auntie Bush Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:43 AM
Response to Reply #5
15. Welcome aboard Phil...I hope you're jumping on the Clark bandwagon!
We always need more boots on the ground! :bounce:
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Auntie Bush Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:09 AM
Response to Original message
9. I think most understand that. Are people saying that he said
that he is not running? If so...I never heard that! He's consistently said that he hasn't said, "no".

My thoughts on interpreting his comment on Cavuto are two fold....

1. He's announcing he is much too concerned about where the country is headed to take the time, effort and energy to run for President and feels he can do more for the country by working behind the lines to advise candidates/politic ans to improve policies of all kinds.

2. He's going to run because he is aware of the need to change policy and point this country in the right direction. Being President is the most effective/efficient way to accomplish that goal.

So take your pick! We still no nothing one way or the other! :(
But I sure hope it's the latter! So sit back and relax as I'm sure he'll be answering that question soon. Say a little prayer or positive thoughts while your sitting there. (And throw all that damn popcorn away...It's fattening!)
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Cameron27 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:19 AM
Response to Reply #9
13. Ok, I pick #2 !
It helps ease my worried mind to believe Wes will be President in two years.:)

If he doesn't run I'm going to find it very difficult to raise much enthusiasm for anyone else. (I have a hunch Al ain't running)
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Auntie Bush Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:40 AM
Response to Reply #13
14. I feel the exact same way you do!
:hi:
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oasis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 11:15 AM
Response to Original message
11. Dems need Clark to run. He adds a "Jim Webb" flavor to the mix.
Gen. Clark:patriot:
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Texas_Kat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-26-07 12:15 PM
Response to Original message
16. A little snarky but... (Hotline Blog)
Not sure what the "2 weeks" is referring to, but maybe the 2-4 Feb Winter meeting.

Wither Wes Clark? Wait Two More Weeks...

http://hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com/archives/2007/01/wither_wes_clar_1.html

Over the Christmas holidays, Ret. Gen. Wes Clark told a close friend that, without a doubt, he would establish a presidential exploratory committee after the first of the year. And now?

A Clark adviser says the '04 candidate is "leaning towards setting up an exploratory then taking some time to explore." Clark accepted an invitation to speak at next weekend's DNC winter meeting in DC, along with the rest of the Democratic field. In addition, a major Democratic donor said that Clark has begun to make telephone calls to party donors."

Clark has popped up on television to discuss the Iraq surge and John Kerry's departure from the race. There were some awkwardly-phrased comments about Jewish political donors in New York.

Clark recognizes that he got in too late in 2003. And he's arguably the most qualified to confront issues of war and peace in these turbulent times. Is February of 2008 equivalent to September of 2003? What an absurd question -- of course not.
...snip
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