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Edited on Mon Sep-22-03 09:38 AM by DoveTurnedHawk
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First in his West Point class in 1966, Clark also won the U.S. Military Academy's only Rhodes scholarship that year. He earned Silver and Bronze stars in Vietnam, where he was wounded badly when the company he was leading on a patrol north of Saigon was ambushed and he was shot four times. After the war, Clark returned to West Point as an instructor in the academy's social sciences department.
He was a White House fellow and later commanding general of the 1st Cavalry Division. In a top staff post as director of strategy and policy for the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff, he worked with U.S. diplomatic troubleshooter Richard Holbrooke to help negotiate the Dayton peace accords that ended the three-way war in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Clark's accomplishments as a hustling problem solver again and again drew the attention of top civilian policymakers, from Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr. during the Nixon administration to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and national security advisor Samuel R. Berger during the Clinton administration.
In dealing with the Balkans crisis, Clark was "the best partner we could have had," Albright enthused in her autobiography. Top Clinton foreign policy officials continue to praise him.
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Col. David Hackworth, a retired Army officer turned commentator, disparaged Clark in a 1999 column as "known to those who've served with him as the Ultimate Perfumed Prince." But in an e-mail exchange, Hackworth said he no longer believed that characterization of Clark to be accurate. "Withdrew it after I read his <Clark's> new book and did further research," Hackworth wrote, adding that he recently interviewed Clark, "and came away very impressed."
<...>http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-clark22sep22,1,7814904.story?coll=la-home-leftrailPrior discussion here: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=102&topic_id=126369DTH
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