Difference between revisions of "Richard A. Clarke"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Relationship with Steve Emerson)
Line 13: Line 13:
  
 
==Relationship with Steve Emerson==
 
==Relationship with Steve Emerson==
During the 1990s Clarke became close to [[Steven Emerson]]. Although Emerson became discredited by his premature attribution of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing to Islamic terrorists, he nevertheless “had the ear of Richard Clarke, whom he regularly briefed in the late ’90s”<ref>Petra Bartosiewicz, [http://www.thenation.com/docprem.mhtml?i=20080204&s=bartosiewicz Experts in Terror] ''The Nation'', 4 February 2008</ref> In a 2002 feature article on Emerson in the ''Brown Alumni News'', Clarke called Emerson “the Paul Revere of Terrorism”.<ref>William Tucker, [http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=6393 ‘He Saw It Coming’], 7 April 2004</ref> Paul Revere is an American patriotic icon who famously acted as night-time messenger warning of the advance of the British army during the War of Independence. Clarke added that he would attend Emerson's speeches whenever possible because “we’d always learn things we weren't hearing from the FBI or CIA, things which almost always proved to be true”. In ''Against All Enemies'' Clarke writes that Emerson's book ''American Jihad'' “had told me more than the FBI ever had about radical Islamic groups in the U.S.”<ref>Rachel Donadio, [http://www.observer.com/node/49047 ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’], ''The New York Observer'', 4 April 2004</ref> Clarke and Emerson have the same literary agent, Len Sherman. Sherman is himself an author and documentary maker, and Clarke and Emerson are his only clients.<ref> Rachel Donadio, [http://www.observer.com/node/49047 ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’], ''The New York Observer'', 4 April 2004</ref>
+
During the 1990s Clarke became close to [[Steven Emerson]]. Although Emerson became discredited by his premature attribution of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing to Islamic terrorists, he nevertheless “had the ear of Richard Clarke, whom he regularly briefed in the late ’90s”<ref>Petra Bartosiewicz, [http://www.thenation.com/docprem.mhtml?i=20080204&s=bartosiewicz Experts in Terror] ''The Nation'', 4 February 2008</ref>
  
 +
On 14 December 1999, an Algerian man was arrested crossing the Canadian border into the United States. His trunk contained bomb making materials that he planned to detonate at Los Angeles International Airport. This became known in counterterrorism circles as the ‘Millennium Plot’. After the arrest Clarke called Emerson from the White House and asked the Investigative Project for a report on militant Islamic cells in North America. [[Steve Emerson]], [[Evan Kohlmann]]. [[Rita Katz]] and two other individuals put together the report.<ref>Benjamin Wallace-Wells, [http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/05/29/060529fa_fact 'PRIVATE JIHAD: How Rita Katz got into the spying business'], ''The New Yorker'', 29 May 2006</ref> Clarke was clearly convinced by the research. He later recalled to PBS:
 +
 +
<blockquote style="background-color:beige;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%">What happened in the millennium plot was that we found someone who had lived in Boston who was the leader of the planned attack at the millennium in Jordan. We found someone who lived in Canada who was planning a simultaneous attack in Los Angeles. When we started pulling on the strings, what we found was there were connections to people in Seattle, Boston, Brooklyn, Manhattan and other cities throughout the United States. Every time we looked at one of these individuals who looked like an Al Qaeda person, they lead us to someone else who was an Al Qaeda person -- probably, somewhere else in the United States<ref>PBS, [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/knew/interviews/clarke.html Interview: Richard A. Clarke], 20 March 2002</ref></blockquote>
 +
 +
In a 2002 feature article on Emerson in the ''Brown Alumni News'', Clarke called Emerson “the Paul Revere of Terrorism”.<ref>William Tucker, [http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=6393 ‘He Saw It Coming’], 7 April 2004</ref> Paul Revere is an American patriotic icon who famously acted as night-time messenger warning of the advance of the British army during the War of Independence. Clarke added that he would attend Emerson's speeches whenever possible because “we’d always learn things we weren't hearing from the FBI or CIA, things which almost always proved to be true”. In ''Against All Enemies'' Clarke writes that Emerson's book ''American Jihad'' “had told me more than the FBI ever had about radical Islamic groups in the U.S.”<ref>Rachel Donadio, [http://www.observer.com/node/49047 ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’], ''The New York Observer'', 4 April 2004</ref> Clarke and Emerson have the same literary agent, Len Sherman. Sherman is himself an author and documentary maker, and Clarke and Emerson are his only clients.<ref> Rachel Donadio, [http://www.observer.com/node/49047 ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’], ''The New York Observer'', 4 April 2004</ref>
  
 
==Resources==
 
==Resources==

Revision as of 10:48, 8 May 2008

Richard Clarke

Richard A. Clarke is a former US government advisor on terrorism turned media pundit and security consultant. He is widely praised in the US media for his warnings of an imminent attack on the United States in the run up to September 11th, although he has come under attack from more extreme conservatives for his outspoken criticism for George Bush’s anti-terrorism policy. He is close to journalist turned terrorism expert Steve Emerson.

Career

Clarke served for 19 years in the Pentagon, the Intelligence Community, and State Department. During the Reagan Administration, he was Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence[1] the second-ranking intelligence officer in the State Department. According to the New York Times, he was credited with devising methods of psychological warfare against the Libyan leader, Colonel Gaddafi.[2] He left the State Department in 1992 amid a bitter row over Israel’s alleged misuse of American military technology. A State Department inspector accused him of going against the US government line by turning a blind-eye to Israel’s sale of weapons bought from the US to China.[3]

Clarke subsequently served as a senior White House Advisor for 11 consecutive years.[4] During the administration of George Bush I he was Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs and he coordinated diplomatic efforts to support the 1990-1991 Gulf War and the subsequent security arrangements.[5] He was Clinton’s National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism during the 1990s. He advocated cruise-missile strikes against a target in Sudan.[6] He also advocated military action following the attack on the USS Cole in October 2000.[7]

In the administration of George Bush II, Clarke was one of the few Clinton aides kept on. He was appointed Special Advisor to the President for Cyber Security.[8] Clarke resigned from the Bush administration in January 2003. He subsequently became a prominent critic of the White House’s handling of counter terrorism.

Clarke is currently the Chairman of Good Harbor Consulting where he advises clients on a range of issues including Corporate security risk management, Information security technology, Dealing with the Federal Government on security and IT issues and Counterterrorism.[9]

Relationship with Steve Emerson

During the 1990s Clarke became close to Steven Emerson. Although Emerson became discredited by his premature attribution of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing to Islamic terrorists, he nevertheless “had the ear of Richard Clarke, whom he regularly briefed in the late ’90s”[10]

On 14 December 1999, an Algerian man was arrested crossing the Canadian border into the United States. His trunk contained bomb making materials that he planned to detonate at Los Angeles International Airport. This became known in counterterrorism circles as the ‘Millennium Plot’. After the arrest Clarke called Emerson from the White House and asked the Investigative Project for a report on militant Islamic cells in North America. Steve Emerson, Evan Kohlmann. Rita Katz and two other individuals put together the report.[11] Clarke was clearly convinced by the research. He later recalled to PBS:

What happened in the millennium plot was that we found someone who had lived in Boston who was the leader of the planned attack at the millennium in Jordan. We found someone who lived in Canada who was planning a simultaneous attack in Los Angeles. When we started pulling on the strings, what we found was there were connections to people in Seattle, Boston, Brooklyn, Manhattan and other cities throughout the United States. Every time we looked at one of these individuals who looked like an Al Qaeda person, they lead us to someone else who was an Al Qaeda person -- probably, somewhere else in the United States[12]

In a 2002 feature article on Emerson in the Brown Alumni News, Clarke called Emerson “the Paul Revere of Terrorism”.[13] Paul Revere is an American patriotic icon who famously acted as night-time messenger warning of the advance of the British army during the War of Independence. Clarke added that he would attend Emerson's speeches whenever possible because “we’d always learn things we weren't hearing from the FBI or CIA, things which almost always proved to be true”. In Against All Enemies Clarke writes that Emerson's book American Jihad “had told me more than the FBI ever had about radical Islamic groups in the U.S.”[14] Clarke and Emerson have the same literary agent, Len Sherman. Sherman is himself an author and documentary maker, and Clarke and Emerson are his only clients.[15]

Resources

Publications

  • Richard A. Clarke, Your government failed you, (New York: HarperCollins, 2008) (ISBN: 9780061474620; 0061474622)
  • Richard A Clarke, Rand Beers, Century Foundation, The forgotten homeland: a Century Foundation task force report (New York: Century Foundation Press, 2006) (ISBN: 0870784986; 9780870784989)
  • Richard A. Clarke, Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror (New York: Free Press, 2004) (ISBN 0-743-26823-7)
  • Richard A Clarke, Glenn P Aga, Century Foundation et al, Defeating the jihadists: a blueprint for action: the report of a task force (New York: Century Foundation Press, 2004) (ISBN: 0870784927; 9780870784927; 0870784919; 9780870784910)

Affiliations

Organisations

Friends and Associates

References

  1. Good Harbor Consulting, Team: RICHARD A. CLARKE - Chairman (access 8 May 2008)
  2. ‘Profile: Richard Clarke’, BBC News Online, 24 March 2004
  3. ‘Profile: Richard Clarke’, BBC News Online, 24 March 2004
  4. Good Harbor Consulting, Team: RICHARD A. CLARKE - Chairman (access 8 May 2008)
  5. Good Harbor Consulting, Team: RICHARD A. CLARKE - Chairman (access 8 May 2008)
  6. ‘Profile: Richard Clarke’, BBC News Online, 24 March 2004
  7. PBS, Interview: Richard A. Clarke, 20 March 2002
  8. Good Harbor Consulting, Team: RICHARD A. CLARKE - Chairman (access 8 May 2008)
  9. Good Harbor Consulting, Team: RICHARD A. CLARKE - Chairman (access 8 May 2008)
  10. Petra Bartosiewicz, Experts in Terror The Nation, 4 February 2008
  11. Benjamin Wallace-Wells, 'PRIVATE JIHAD: How Rita Katz got into the spying business', The New Yorker, 29 May 2006
  12. PBS, Interview: Richard A. Clarke, 20 March 2002
  13. William Tucker, ‘He Saw It Coming’, 7 April 2004
  14. Rachel Donadio, ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’, The New York Observer, 4 April 2004
  15. Rachel Donadio, ‘Richard Clarke's Unsecret Agent’, The New York Observer, 4 April 2004