San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

JOHNSON’S ATTORNEY GENERAL WHO BECAME A CRITIC OF U.S. POLICIES

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Ramsey Clark, who was U.S. attorney general under President Lyndon B. Johnson and then, after leaving government service, redefined himself as a relentless critic of American foreign policy and as a courtroom defender of widely reviled figures such as former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein, died Friday at his home in New York City. He was 93.

The death was confirmed by a great-niece, Sharon Welch. The cause was not immediatel­y known.

As attorney general, Clark had prosecuted pediatrici­an and best-selling author Benjamin Spock for conspiracy to aid draft resisters during the Vietnam War. Within three years of leaving office, Clark had flown to Hanoi to denounce U.S. aggression and went to court to defend Philip Berrigan and other leading antiwar activists.

For a time, Clark was a darling of the left — a blunt outspoken former Cabinet member who publicly raised questions about the morality of American interventi­ons abroad. He attacked what he called the United States’ “sham” democracy, ruled not by the people but by the wealthy few, and he decried the nation’s “genocidal” foreign policy and “certifiabl­y insane” military spending.

Still, Clark continued to serve occasional­ly in official capacities for the government. In 1979, at the request of President Jimmy Carter, he tried to negotiate the release of 53 Americans taken hostage in Tehran after the fall of the U.s.-backed shah in Iran. When he was denied entry into Iran, Clark flew home.

Then he returned to Tehran months later to take part in a “Crimes in America” conference that adopted a resolution condemning U.S. actions in Iran.

“If you really love your country, you work very hard to make it right,” Clark later told the Los Angeles Times. “Anything else is an extreme act of disloyalty and an extreme failure of courage.”

Clark later sued the U.S. government for bombing Libya in 1986 in response to a terrorist attack on a Berlin disco. He traveled to Panama after the 1989 American invasion to document what he said was the U.S. military’s cover-up of a “physical assault of stunning violence,” and he voiced opposition to U.S. war efforts against Iraq in 1990 and 2003.

Conservati­ves came to loathe Clark, but support for him also began to erode among left-leaning activists as he made a habit of defending a rogues’ gallery of accused terrorists and war criminals.

His client list included political extremist Lyndon Larouche; several followers of the Branch Davidian cult leader David Koresh; and Lori Berenson, an American who was imprisoned in Peru for aiding a Marxist revolution­ary group.

Clark also defended Slobodan Milosevic, the former president of former Serbia and Yugoslavia, who died while being tried for genocide by a United Nations tribunal at The Hague; Elizaphan Ntakirutim­ana, a Rwandan pastor who was found guilty of engineerin­g a massacre of ethnic Tutsis inside his church; and Karl Linnas, an elderly former commander of a Nazi concentrat­ion camp.

“You don’t go after septuagena­rians 40 years after some god-awful crime they’re alleged to have committed,” Clark once said, speaking of Linnas. “If you do, then what it really means is, if we find you, we’ll kill you, so act accordingl­y. It means that we’re going to be condemned to eternal conflict, which is my great concern. We’ve got to find a way to end wars.”

His most notorious client was Saddam, who was accused not only of orchestrat­ing the genocide of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Kurds, but also of ordering the murder of 148 boys and men after his motorcade was fired on in 1982 near Dujail.

“He had this huge war going on,” Clark told the BBC in Saddam’s defense, “and you have to act firmly when you have an assassinat­ion attempt.”

Clark called his legal work an extension of his 1960s Justice Department efforts to defend civil rights. “People are guaranteed fairness under the constituti­on,” he told the Dallas Morning News in 1996. “And the constituti­on doesn’t say you only get fair treatment under certain conditions.”

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