In 1991, Clark's Coalition to Stop U.S. Intervention in the Middle East opposed the U.S.-led war and sanctions against Iraq. Clark accused the administration of President
George H. W. Bush, its officials
Dan Quayle,
James Baker,
Dick Cheney,
William Webster,
Colin Powell,
Norman Schwarzkopf, and "others to be named" of "crimes against peace, war crimes", and "crimes against humanity" for its conduct of the
Gulf War against Iraq and the ensuing
sanctions; in 1996, he added the charges of
genocide and the "use of a weapon of mass destruction". Similarly, after the
1999 NATO bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ramsey charged and "tried" NATO on 19 counts and issued calls for its dissolution. In September 1998, Clark led a delegation to
Sudan to collect evidence in the aftermath of President
Bill Clinton's bombing of the
Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in
Khartoum the previous month as part of
Operation Infinite Reach. Upon returning to the U.S., the delegation held a press conference on September 22, 1998, to refute the U.S. State Department's claims that the facility had been producing
VX nerve agent. U.S. officials later acknowledged that the evidence cited as the rationale for the Al-Shifa strike was weaker than initially believed. As a lawyer, Clark was criticized by both opponents and supporters for some of the people he agreed to defend, such as foreign dictators hostile to the United States; Clark stood beside and defended his clients, regardless of their own admitted actions and crimes. In 2004, Clark joined a panel of about 20 Arab and one other non-Arab lawyers to defend
Saddam Hussein in his trial before the
Iraqi Special Tribunal. Clark appeared before the Iraqi Special Tribunal in late November 2005 arguing "that it failed to respect basic human rights and was illegal because it was formed as a consequence of the United States' illegal war of aggression against the people of Iraq." Clark said that unless the trial was seen as "absolutely fair", it would "divide rather than reconcile Iraq".
Christopher Hitchens said Clark was admitting Hussein's guilt when Clark reportedly stated in a 2005 BBC interview: "He [Saddam] had this huge war going on, and you have to act firmly when you have an assassination attempt". Hitchens continued to describe Clark in the following terms: Sociologist and anti-communist scholar
Paul Hollander wrote of Clark: Clark was not alone in criticizing the Iraqi Special Tribunal's trial of Saddam Hussein, which drew intense criticism from international human rights organizations.
Human Rights Watch called Saddam's trial a "missed opportunity" and a "deeply flawed trial", and the UN
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention found the trial to be unfair and to violate basic international human rights law. One of the aforementioned outbursts occurred when Clark was ejected from the trial after passing the judge a memorandum stating that the trial was making "a mockery of justice". The chief judge
Raouf Abdul Rahman shouted at Clark, "No, you are the mockery ... get him out. Out!" On March 18, 2006, Clark attended the funeral of
Slobodan Milošević. He commented: "History will prove Milošević was right. Charges are just that: charges. The trial did not have facts." He compared the
trial of Milošević with Saddam's, stating "both trials are marred with injustice, both are flawed." He characterized Milošević and Saddam Hussein as "both commanders who were courageous enough to fight more powerful countries." In June 2006, Clark wrote an article criticizing U.S. foreign policy in general, containing a list of 17 U.S. "major aggressions" introduced by "Both branches of our One Party system, Democrat and Republican, favor the use of force to have their way." He followed this by saying, "The United States government may have been able to outspend the Soviet Union into economic collapse in the Cold War arms race, injuring the entire planet in the process. Now Bush has entered a new arms race and is provoking a Second Cold War." On September 1, 2007, in New York City, Clark called for detained
Filipino Jose Maria Sison's release and pledged assistance by joining the latter's legal defense team headed by Jan Fermon. Clark doubted Dutch authorities' "validity and competency", since the murder charges originated in the
Philippines and had already been dismissed by the country's Supreme Court. In November 2007, Clark visited
Nandigram in India where
conflict between state government forces and villagers resulted in the death of at least 14 villagers. In a December 2007 interview, he described the
war on terror as a
war against Islam. , India, November 2007 In April 2009, Clark spoke at a session of the UN's anti-racism
Durban Review Conference at which he accused Israel of genocide. In September 2010, an essay on torture by Clark was published in a three-part paperback entitled
The Torturer in the Mirror (Seven Stories Press). and also the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award for his commitment to
civil rights, his opposition to war and military spending and his dedication to providing legal representation to the peace movement, particularly, his efforts to free
Leonard Peltier. In 1999, he traveled to
Belgrade to receive an honorary doctorate from
Belgrade University. In 2008, the United Nations awarded him its
Prize in the Field of Human Rights for "his steadfast insistence on respect for human rights and fair judicial process for all". ==Advocating the impeachment of George W. Bush==