Richard A Clarke Popular Books

Richard A Clarke Biography & Facts

Richard Alan Clarke (born October 27, 1950) is an American national security expert, novelist, and former government official. He served as the Counterterrorism Czar for the National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-Terrorism for the United States between 1998 and 2003. Clarke worked for the State Department during the presidency of Ronald Reagan. In 1992, President George H. W. Bush appointed him to chair the Counter-terrorism Security Group and to a seat on the United States National Security Council. President Bill Clinton retained Clarke and in 1998 promoted him to be the National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism, the chief counter-terrorism adviser on the National Security Council. Under President George W. Bush, Clarke initially continued in the same position but no longer had Cabinet-level access. He was later appointed as Special Advisor to the President on cybersecurity. Clarke left the Bush administration in 2003. Clarke came to widespread public attention for his counter-terrorism role in March 2004: He published a memoir about his service in government, Against All Enemies, appeared on the 60 Minutes television news magazine, and testified before the 9/11 Commission. In all three cases, Clarke sharply criticized the Bush administration's attitude toward counter-terrorism before the September 11 attacks, and its decision afterward to wage war and invade Iraq. Clarke was criticized by some supporters of Bush's decisions. After leaving U.S. government, with U.S. government legal approvals, Clarke helped the United Arab Emirates to set up a cyber security unit intended to protect their nation. Years after Clarke left, some components of the program were acquired by a sequence of firms, and it is reported they eventually surveilled women's rights activists, UN diplomats, and FIFA officials. Background Richard Clarke was born to a worker in a chocolate factory and a nurse in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1950. He attended the Boston Latin School, where he graduated in 1968. He attended college at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1972. He had been selected to serve in the Sphinx Senior Society. After starting as a management intern at the U.S. Department of Defense and later working as an analyst on European security issues, Clarke went to graduate school. He earned a master's degree in management in 1978 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Government career In 1973, Clarke began work in the federal government as a management intern in the Department of Defense. He worked in numerous areas of defense while in headquarters. From 1979 to 1985, he worked at the Department of State as a career analyst in the Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs. Beginning in 1985, Clarke was appointed by the Ronald Reagan administration as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence—his first political appointee position as a Republican Party member. During the administration of George H. W. Bush, he was appointed as the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs. He coordinated diplomatic efforts to support the 1990–1991 Gulf War and subsequent security arrangements. Democrat Bill Clinton kept Clarke on in his administration, appointing him in 1998 as National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism for the National Security Council. In this position, he had cabinet-level access to the president. Clarke continued as counter-terrorism coordinator at the NSC during the first year of the George W. Bush administration, but no longer had access, as the position's scope was reduced. His written recommendations and memos had to go through layers of political appointees above him. In 2001, he was appointed as Special Advisor to the President on cybersecurity and cyberterrorism. He resigned from the Bush administration in early 2003. Clarke's positions inside the government have included: United States Department of State 1985–1992 Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs, 1989–1992 Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence, 1985–1988 United States National Security Council, 1992–2003 Special Advisor, 2001–2003 National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism, 1998–2001 Chairman of the Counter-terrorism Security Group, 1992–2003 Clinton administration During the Rwandan genocide of 1994, Clarke advised Madeleine Albright, then–US Ambassador to the United Nations, to request the UN to withdraw all UN troops from the country. She refused, and permitted Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire to keep a few hundred UN troops; his forces saved tens of thousands from the genocide. Later Clarke told Samantha Power, "It wasn't in American's national interest. If we had to do the same thing today and I was advising the President, I would advise the same thing." He supervised the writing of PDD-25, a classified Executive Order that established criteria for future U.S. participation in U.N. peacekeeping operations. It also proposed a reduced military and economic role for the United States in Rwanda. After Islamists took control in Sudan in a 1989 coup d'état, the United States had adopted a policy of disengagement with the authoritarian regime throughout the 1990s. After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, however, some critics charged that the U.S. should have moderated its policy toward Sudan earlier. The influence of Islamists there waned in the second half of the 1990s, and Sudanese officials began to indicate an interest in accommodating US concerns related to Osama bin Laden. He lived in Sudan until he was expelled in May 1996. (He was later revealed to be the planner of 9/11.) Timothy M. Carney, U.S. ambassador to Sudan between September 1995 and November 1997, co-authored an op-ed in 2002 claiming that in 1997, Sudan offered to turn over its intelligence on bin Laden to the US, but that Susan Rice, as National Security Council (NSC) Africa specialist, together with NSC terrorism specialist Richard A. Clarke, successfully lobbied for continuing to bar U.S. officials, including the CIA and FBI, from engaging with the Khartoum government. Similar allegations (that Susan Rice joined others in missing an opportunity to cooperate with Sudan on counter-terrorism) were made by David Rose, Vanity Fair contributing editor, and Richard Miniter, author of Losing Bin Laden. Clarke was involved in supervising the investigation of Ramzi Yousef, one of the main perpetrators of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, who had traveled to the United States on an Iraqi passport. Yousef is the nephew of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, a senior al-Qaeda member. Many in the Clinton administration and the intelligence community believed Yousef's ties were evidence linking al-Qaeda's activities and the government of Iraq. In February 1999, Clarke wrote the Deputy National Securit.... Discover the Richard A Clarke popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Richard A Clarke books.

Best Seller Richard A Clarke Books of 2024

  • On the Trail of the Serpent synopsis, comments

    On the Trail of the Serpent

    Richard Neville & Julie Clarke

    The complete story of Charles Sobhraj, the serial killer who inspired the hit Netflix series The Serpent.Charles Sobhraj remains one of the world's great conmen, and as a serial ki...

  • Last Christmas synopsis, comments

    Last Christmas

    Greg Wise & Emma Thompson

    'The perfect gift for anyone who loves all things Christmas ... it's a festive gem' Woman & Home'A beautiful, funny and soulful collection of personal essays' PrimaThe perfect ...

  • The Night Before Christmas synopsis, comments

    The Night Before Christmas

    Clement C. Moore & Amanda Brack

    Spread the Christmas cheer with this whimsical retelling of Clement C. Moore’s cherished poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas.” This new edition of the classic features the text of Moo...

  • The Night Before Christmas synopsis, comments

    The Night Before Christmas

    Clement C. Moore & Bill Bell

    Since it first appeared in 1823 as “A Visit from St. Nicholas,” The Night Before Christmas has been a classic holiday story, read and enjoyed by children and adults during the holi...

  • It Starts Today synopsis, comments

    It Starts Today

    Jono Castano

    Personal trainer to the stars Jono Castano has been the motivator for thousands of powerful fitness transformations, was inhouse trainer at Men's Health Magazine and is Founder of ...

  • Soulmates synopsis, comments

    Soulmates

    Miranda Glover

    Emi and Polly Leto are identical twins with a shared life until Emi vanishes and Polly is left searching. Now one becomes two, and twindom becomes duplicity as myth and memory merg...

  • The Patient Doctor synopsis, comments

    The Patient Doctor

    Ben Bravery

    At the age of twentyeight, with his Beijingbased science communications business doing well and a new relationship blossoming, Ben Bravery woke from a colonoscopy to be told he had...

  • The Stalker synopsis, comments

    The Stalker

    Kate Rhodes

    She thinks she understand stalkers. Until she becomes the stalked…  Elly is an expert in stalking – an academic at Cambridge University, and a talking head for TV and online, ...

  • Home at Grasmere synopsis, comments

    Home at Grasmere

    Dorothy Wordsworth & William Wordsworth

    A continuous text made up of extracts from Dorothy Wordsworth's Journal and a selection of her brother's poems. Dorothy Wordsworth kept her Journal 'because I shall give William pl...

  • Synners synopsis, comments

    Synners

    Pat Cadigan

    In Synners, the line between technology and humanity is hopelessly slim. To be a Synner is to join the online hardcore, an outlaw band of hackers, simulation pirates, and reality s...

  • In the Wars synopsis, comments

    In the Wars

    Dr Waheed Arian

    AS HEARD ON DESERT ISLAND DISCSAS SEEN ON THE CHANGEMAKERS, a Paramount+ docuseries profiling activists fighting for changeA WATERSTONES PAPERBACK OF THE YEAR'A riveting story of l...

  • The Berlin Project synopsis, comments

    The Berlin Project

    Gregory Benford

    New York Times bestselling author Gregory Benford creates an alternate history about the creation of the atomic bomb that explores what could have happened if the bomb was ready to...

  • The Wrong Move synopsis, comments

    The Wrong Move

    Jennifer Savin

    YOU THOUGHT IT WAS THE PERFECT FLAT...When Jessie moves into a flatshare at Maver Place, she’s finally found a decent place to live.And when she’s befriended by fellow tenants Laur...

  • The Peel Sessions synopsis, comments

    The Peel Sessions

    Ken Garner

    This is a story of teenage dreams, which, as any Peel fan knows, are hard to beat. Between 1967 and 2004 John Peel picked over 2000 bands to come and record over 4000 sessions to b...

  • Worldmakers synopsis, comments

    Worldmakers

    Gardner Dozois

    When mankind moves out to the stars, the colonists of the future will remake the worlds they inhabit in their image. Included here are twenty stories from the most imaginative writ...

  • Joseph S. Clarke and Richard S. Briscoe, Appellants v. William G. W. White synopsis, comments

    Joseph S. Clarke and Richard S. Briscoe, Appellants v. William G. W. White

    United States Supreme Court

    The appellants contend the decree should be reversed, and the bill dismissed; upon various propositions of law and fact. 1st. It is insisted: 'The complainant has laid no ground in...

  • Edmund P. Gaines and Mira Clarke, Late Whitney, Complainants v. Richard Relf synopsis, comments

    Edmund P. Gaines and Mira Clarke, Late Whitney, Complainants v. Richard Relf

    United States Supreme Court

    CERTIFICATE of Division from the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. A bill of complaint was originally filed in the district court of the United States for the ea...

  • Remembrance synopsis, comments

    Remembrance

    Ray Bradbury

    Iconic author of Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, and Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury believed that, someday, a collection of his letters could illuminate the ...

  • Books that Made Us synopsis, comments

    Books that Made Us

    Carl Reinecke

    A cultural history of Australia told through our fiction.Australia's novels lie at the heart of the country. Capturing everyday lives and exceptional dreams, they have held up a mi...

  • The Modern Pagan synopsis, comments

    The Modern Pagan

    Brian Day

    Paganism means living in harmony with nature and respecting all that nature has to offer. It is a sustainable way of life that has existed in the British Isles for thousands of yea...

  • Causing Death and Saving Lives synopsis, comments

    Causing Death and Saving Lives

    Jonathan Glover

    The moral problems of abortion, infanticide, suicide, euthanasia, capital punshiment, war and othe lifeordeath choices.

  • 34 Patients synopsis, comments

    34 Patients

    Tom Templeton

    Discover the profound and moving portrait of one doctor's life and work in the NHS'Wonderful insightful and compassionate' Dr Richard Shepherd, bestselling author of Unnatural Cau...

  • Space Craze synopsis, comments

    Space Craze

    Margaret A. Weitekamp

    A space historian's tour through astounding spaceflight history and the Smithsonian's collection of space and science fiction memorabiliaWinner of the American Institute of Ae...

  • A Town Called Treachery synopsis, comments

    A Town Called Treachery

    Mitch Jennings

    A deadbeat dad. A curious boy. A journo drowning in the past ... and a town full of secrets. Can the truth ever be found in a town called Treachery?'One of a kind' Malcolm Knox'Com...

  • Ruth synopsis, comments

    Ruth

    Elizabeth Gaskell

    Ruth Hilton is an orphaned young seamstress who catches the eye of a gentleman, Henry Bellingham, who is captivated by her simplicity and beauty. When she loses her job and home, h...