During the ABC debate held here last week, Clinton singled out one of her supporters from the stage, and it was neither of her top local boosters, Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell nor Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter. Instead, she pointed to a retired four-star general who once served as the supreme commander of NATO. “General Wesley Clark is here in the audience with me, as one of my major supporters,” she said, as the camera focused on him acknowledging her words. His support, and that of other military figures, has been key as Clinton has tried to make the case that she would be the best commander-in-chief—no small task for a female candidate. She has cultivated deep ties with the military during her service on the US Senate’s Armed Forces Committee, ties on which she has called throughout her campaign and particularly in recent weeks when she has tried to argue that her rival Obama doesn’t have the national security credentials for the job. Clark has been at the top of the pack of Clinton’s military cadre, appearing with her at major foreign policy addresses and surfacing in rumors as a possible running mate. Yet Clark could pose a potential liability among Jewish voters, just as the Jewish Rendell poses a benefit. Clark made some Jews uncomfortable back in January 2007 in comments to liberal blogger Arianna Huffington. In the interview, he referred to the concept of bombing Iran before exhausting diplomatic options as “outrageous,” and then reportedly answered that what made him sure the US was moving towards such an attack was that,
You just have to read what’s in the Israeli press. The Jewish community is divided, but there is so much pressure being channeled from the New York money people to the office-seekers.
ADL’s Abe Foxman spoke to Clark about his comments, particularly the offense taken at the phrase “New York money people.” He later told The Forward newspaper,
He is a friend of Israel and is not an anti-Semite … but some of the things he said are very, very unfortunate.
When asked about the possibility that he represented a liability with Jewish voters because of his controversial comments, Clark became visibly agitated, saying,
I haven’t made any comments that have caused any problem. My father was Jewish. Do you know that? Do you know that? My father was Jewish, okay? I was in Israel in September. I’ve got a lot of friends there. I’m very well-respected in the Jewish community, and in the Israeli Jewish community. Thank you.