
NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR)
"You never know what's happening on the other side of the hill. That's why you need air power."
Wesley Clark was the American four-star general who commanded NATO's 78-day air campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999 and navigated the alliance's most dangerous military operation since its founding. Born in 1944 in Chicago, Clark was a Rhodes Scholar and West Point valedictorian who served in Vietnam (where he was shot four times by enemy fire), commanded at every level from company to corps, and became the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) in 1997. His management of Operation Allied Force was extraordinary in its political complexity — he had to simultaneously direct military operations while managing nineteen NATO governments with wildly divergent views on the campaign's scope, acceptable targets, and potential ground invasion. Clark consistently pushed for more aggressive targeting and a ground option that most NATO allies, and the Pentagon itself, were reluctant to authorize.
Did you know?
Clark ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, entering the race late and briefly leading national polls before withdrawing in February. He was endorsed by Bill Clinton and Michael Moore and positioned himself as the most credible national security candidate in the Democratic field.
November 21, 1995 · 0 total casualties
The Dayton Accords ended three and a half years of war in Bosnia but created a state structure that has frustrated political development ever since — two near-separate entities with parallel governments, armies, and education systems that institutionalized ethnic division. The agreement recognized the territorial gains of ethnic cleansing while stopping the killing, a compromise that diplomats called unavoidable and critics called deeply unjust. Dayton remains the constitutional framework of Bosnia-Herzegovina, frequently described as 'the peace that never became reconciliation.'
February 28, 1998 – June 10, 1999 · 13,535 total casualties
The Kosovo War established the precedent of humanitarian intervention without UN Security Council authorization — a radical departure from international law that NATO justified as necessary to prevent genocide, and which Russia and China condemned as illegal aggression. The war produced what would become the 'Responsibility to Protect' doctrine and directly led to Kosovo's eventual declaration of independence in 2008. It was also the first time in history that a functioning state was stripped of territorial control by an international military alliance without a UN mandate.
March 24 – June 10, 1999 · 5,700 total casualties
The 78-day bombing campaign demonstrated both the power and the limits of air power as a coercive instrument. The accidental bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade caused a major diplomatic crisis with Beijing and briefly threatened to break the NATO coalition. The campaign also exposed serious munitions shortages in European NATO members and accelerated US-European debates about burden-sharing that would persist for decades. The F-117 Nighthawk stealth aircraft was shot down by a Serbian SA-3 Neva missile on March 27, marking the first combat loss of a stealth aircraft.
December 23, 1944
🌅 Birth
Born in Chicago, Illinois
June 1966
📚 Education
Graduated first in class from West Point Military Academy
1966
📚 Education
Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, studying philosophy, politics and economics
1969
⚔️ Battle
Vietnam — wounded four times in ambush; awarded Silver Star
November 1995
⚔️ Battle
Serves as NATO military representative at Dayton peace negotiations
July 1997
📍 Posting
Appointed NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), based at SHAPE headquarters, Mons
March 24, 1999
⚔️ Battle
Launches Operation Allied Force — NATO's 78-day air campaign against Yugoslavia
May 2000
🕊️ Postwar
Relieved of SACEUR command one year early; retired from US Army