Ramsey Clark:
A former attorney-general attempts to impeach President George W Bush  A
voice of reason

Profile by Gamal Nkrumah   

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For former United States Attorney-General Ramsey Clark politics is not a
career, it is about how the world might best be run. He is a political
activist, an octogenarian participant at peace conferences and in
anti-war demonstrations, and he does not mince his words. He gives
cynicism, in all its guises, a wide berth. And he is vehemently opposed
to "killing innocent people because we don't like their leaders". 

At an 18 January gathering of 500,000 people in Washington DC organised
by the Act Now and Stop War and Racism (ANSWER) Coalition Clark called
for the impeachment of US President George W Bush. The anti-war protest
coincided with the commemoration of the 74th birthday anniversary of the
late Dr Martin Luther King, assassinated after leading a Poor People's
Campaign in April 1968 when Clark was attorney-general. It was the first
year in US history that there were no executions, a record of which
Clark is proud. 

He supervised the drafting and passage of the voting Rights Act of 1965
and the Civil Rights Act of 1968, radical new laws that changed the face
of the American legal system and went some way to improve the legal
standing of African Americans. 

Born in 1927 in Dallas, Texas, to a wealthy family of legal
practitioners, he graduated from the prestigious University of Chicago
Law School. After a stint with the US Marines during World War II he
entered the legal profession. His big break came when US President John
F Kennedy appointed him assistant attorney-general in 1961. He spent the
next four years at the Department of Justice. Between 1964-65 he was
national president of the Federal Bar Association. As the son of Tom C
Clark, US attorney-general in the 1940s, he was all too familiar with
the American political establishment he later learned to despise, a
child of the very system he would later in life denounce. 

Clark is strongly critical of certain aspects of American culture. "We
glorify violence. The most admired people are those that have
accumulated the most wealth," he points out. 

Clark dismisses American democracy as a sham. "Democracy is just a word.
You have to give it meaning. The US is not a democracy. Most Americans
do not vote. We haven't had a real choice for a long, long time now.
Wealth rules. Corporations rule. The US is a plutocracy -- government by
wealthy people. Certain people control multinational corporations. You
couldn't get elected in the US without lots of money." 

By his early 20s Clark had mapped out an ambitious life plan. He met his
wife Georgia at the University of Texas. They have a son, Tom, and a
daughter, Ronda, and three grandchildren. "We married at age 20," he
remembers. 

The young family then moved to Chicago where Clark completed his legal
studies, after which he practiced for nine years. Georgia was the
homemaker, and remains a strong support in his life, helping him with
his work. "She manages the office and counts the money," he smiles
knowingly. 

>From the word go Clark was more interested in America's poor and
disadvantaged than in its moneyed elites. Following his graduation he
became deeply involved in civil rights. "That was in part why I was
selected by Robert F Kennedy as a young assistant," he explains. They
were times of major changes in the US political establishment. Robert F
Kennedy was something of a political mentor in those early days. 

Clark's work with civil rights groups was an eye-opener. He witnessed
first hand "the enormous violence latent in our society towards
unpopular people". In sharp contrast to many of his colleagues, who saw
civil rights activists subversive, Clark realised such activism was a
product of institutionalised racism. 

He fought against the death penalty and the notoriously racist prison
system of the US and in 1970 abandoned government altogether to
concentrate on defending victims of US oppression such as longtime
Native American rights activist on death row Leonard Peltier who has
been in prison for the past 26 years for allegedly killing an FBI agent.


Beyond America's borders Clark championed the cause of such
controversial figures as the former Yugoslav strongman Slobodan
Milosevic. 

"I met Milosevic a few days ago. His health has deteriorated," he tells
me in Cairo. "He had the strength to hold the people of his country
together in a very difficult situation." 

Among Clark's most controversial clients have been Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic and Omar Abdel-Rahman, the blind Egyptian sheikh
accused of masterminding a plot to bring down the World Trade Centre.
Clark has no qualms about assisting those with whom he might be at
ideological odds: "There are no demons. There are people who do evil
deeds and there are people who are demonised because of the political
ends and big-business interests of the US military-industrial complex." 

As far as Clark is concerned Iraq has been caught up in a wider plot.
The real intention behind the US strike against Iraq is to subdue the
people of the oil-rich Middle East so as to more effectively exploit the
resources of the region. Clark abhors America's use of "technology
against life" and routinely denounces US government officials as
"international outlaws". 

How, he asks, can the US commit almost any crime against humanity and no
heads roll. Yet the US pursues and punishes with impunity those it deems
detrimental to its global interests. Clark is against the "law of the
jungle" instituted in the international stage by Pax- Americana and is
currently working on the creation of an Internet Web site centred around
his campaign to impeach President Bush. 

Clark served under US President Lyndon Johnson between 1967-69, a time
when the country was experiencing a profound crisis of confidence, not
least in its political institutions. People were questioning the way in
which the American political establishment conducted its political
activities, both on the domestic and international fronts. The Cold War
was at a peak and the Vietnam War was beginning to make an indelible
mark on the national psyche. The Civil Rights Movement rocked America,
and the 1960s were in full swing. It was a time of introspection and
soul- searching, a period that continues to influence Clark's worldview.


By the mid- 1960s Clark was at the zenith of his political career yet
his main concern, even then, was the welfare of the vulnerable and
downtrodden. The testimony of Alaskan Native Emil Notti bears witness to
the character of the man who has become to many a symbol of goodwill and
magnanimity. Unemployment, under- achievement, poor education and poor
housing were among the issues with which Notti's people were grappling.
In those days life expectancy among Native Alaskans was 34 years. Infant
mortality was three times the national average. Native Alaskans were
systematically dispossessed of their ancestral lands. 

"I testified for about four years before the House and Senate Committees
and we were handled roughly at times," Notti says, recalling the first
time he sat on the Scoop Jackson Committee. "On one side of me was
Supreme Justice Arthur Goldberg, on the other Attorney- General Ramsey
Clark, and they treated our cause with some respect. There was an issue
that came to a point of law, and Ramsey Clark gave an extemporaneous
answer and he ended by saying to Scoop Jackson, 'Senator, if you'd like
I'll brief the problem for you'. And Scoop Jackson said, 'General, if
that's your recollection of the law, I'll accept it.' It was a great
help to have people of national standing with us." 

Clark's only motivation seems to be a deep sense of social justice, and
it is only admiration for him that I feel as we chat in the lobby of the
Conrad Hotel, Cairo. The opulent venue appears an odd setting for a
meeting with such an unassuming and down-to-earth man who,
characteristically, is in town to participate in an anti-war against
Iraq conference. 

Clark is a fierce critic of US foreign policy and domestic human rights
abuses and his determination to fight for justice has earned him many
enemies. 

"I've been threatened by two attorney- generals," he tells me. "First by
Richard Kleindienst after I went on a peace mission to North Vietnam."
(Clark, incidentally, relinquished office because under the Johnson
administration the war in Vietnam had escalated and in protest against
the FBI's ruthless clampdown on civil rights activists under the Counter
Intelligence Programme, the dreaded so-called COINTELPRO.) 

The second time, was after Clark visited Iran in June 1980 at the time
of the Iranian hostage crisis. "They threatened to prosecute me," Clark
recounts. "They never got round to it." 

Democracy is being used crudely, and cruelly, to force a regime change
in Baghdad, Clark warns. "If, as promised so many times, the US does
launch a full-scale attack on Iraq to overthrow its government it will
be the most arrogant violation of the Charter of the United Nation, the
Nuremburg Charter and international law yet experienced, or likely
hereafter." 

He launches into a heartfelt tirade. "We bomb and embargo millions
because we hate their leader and want to control their oil." 

Clark has devoted the best part of his life to fighting injustice. Today
it is the imminent US strike on Iraq that engages his attention. "Only
absolute power, unrestrained by any rule of law or standards of human
decency, openly taunts an intended victim as President George W Bush has
taunted Iraq." 

Yesterday it was Yugoslavia. Milosevic was struggling to preserve
Yugoslavia, Clark says. "If there was any independent state in central
and eastern Europe it was Yugoslavia. They were playing off the Soviet
Union and the US to maintain their independence and relative
prosperity." That was during the socialist and non- aligned regime of
the country's founder, Joseph Broz Tito. In Tito's day, Yugoslavs were
happily united -- a rare occurrence in the Balkans. 

"In 1991 there were six [constituent] republics with lots of different
peoples in Yugoslavia. And Belgrade had held all these formerly warring
groups together in peace. In 1991 Time reported that by far the most
progressive, and truly the most successful country in Eastern Europe,
was Yugoslavia. And almost immediately you see foreign powers trying to
dismantle it. First they dismantled Slovenia, then Croatia. Germany
comes in after its deplorable historical record in the Balkans and
encourages Croatian independence. Then Bosnia and Macedonia." 

"We deliberately broke it up. It was US policy to break it up for
economic exploitation and to show other Eastern European nations not to
dare dream of being independent. If you want to have any economic or
political independence you'll be crushed. That was the brutal message
signalled to Yugoslavia's neighbours." 

A public example had to be made of Milosevic's Yugoslavia: "Within two
years of the break up of the Soviet Union Ukraine became the third
largest recipient of US aid. First Israel and second Egypt and third
Ukraine. Can you imagine the old enemy? And what was the aid for? It was
to identify public facilities for privatisation. And most went to
American companies, and we identified 6,000 properties. We destroyed
their economies and they were obliged to buy our goods. And you pay our
price. And we'll advertise and make you want to buy our goods just like
we make you want McDonald's and blue jeans. And now what have the people
got? They lost their education system, they've lost their health care
system and they've lost their jobs. [Western investors] came in with big
plans for privatisation and nationalisation. What they did is
unbelievable -- a despicable act of greed," Clark says. And the same
fate awaits a defeated Iraq, he warns. 

Clark decries the death, disease and devastation created by 10 years of
sanctions against Iraq. 

"The living conditions of the people of Iraq were among the best in the
region from the 1970s till 1990. About $3,000 per capita income and free
medicine. The sanctions are a weapon of mass destruction. They are
genocide." 

Iraq, he claims, is the victim of a crime against humanity. "On 6 August
1990, on the 45th anniversary of the US atomic bomb being dropped on
Hiroshima, the US crafted economic sanctions against Iraq, with the
approval of the UN Security Council. Those sanctions, still in place,
have resulted in the death of 1.5 million Iraqis. Depleted uranium has
made millions more sick." 

"We didn't want them to feed themselves for a long time," Clark
explains. "The hypocrisy of the UN is beyond comprehension." 

Sanctions, he points out, violate the 1948 UN Convention on Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. Sanctions are worse than war.
The 1975-95 sanctions against Vietnam cost the Vietnamese people as much
as the actual US aggression, if not more. The country lay in economic
shambles and the Vietnamese Boat People became a byword for desperation.


"Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger systematically set Muslim
people to fight each other. 'Let them do the fighting themselves. Let
them finish themselves off,' he said about the Iraq-Iran war. He wanted
them to fight to the finish. From 1972-76, the late Shah of Iran bought
$21 billion worth of weapons from the US. He was our surrogate to
control the oil-rich Gulf region militarily." 

Current US Secretary of State Colin Powell is no better. "'Frankly,
that's a number that doesn't interest me very much,' Powell said when
asked by a reporter about Iraqi casualty figures. But let it not be said
that people in the US did nothing when their government declared a war
without limit and instituted stark new measures of repression." 

There is no nation on earth more dangerous than the US, Clark who
founded and now heads the New York-based International Action Centre,
maintains. Clark calls on the people of the US to resist the policies
and political direction that have emerged since 11 September, 2001. He
decries the secret detention of thousands of people in the name of
combating terror: "Now we are entering a new repressive phase, ominously
reminiscent of the McCarthyist era." 

So is there any vestige of hope left for America, and for the world? 

"I am an optimist by nature, I guess it is in the genes. I get it from
my mom." 

C a p t i o n : "On 6 August 1990, on the 45th anniversary of the US
atomic bomb being dropped on Hiroshima, the US crafted economic
sanctions against Iraq, with the approval of the UN Security Council.
Those sanctions, still in place, have resulted in the death of 1.5
million Iraqis. Depleted uranium has made millions more sick." 


C Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly. All rights reserved

Al-Ahram Weekly Online : 6 - 12 February 2003 (Issue No. 624)
Located at: http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/624/profile.htm 




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