"The greatest crime since World War II has been U.S. foreign policy"
About this Quote
The subtext is also institutional: Clark is speaking as someone who knew the machinery from the inside. As attorney general under LBJ, he witnessed the Vietnam era’s legitimacy crisis up close, then spent much of his later life as a dissenter, aligning himself with antiwar movements and controversial defendants. That biography gives the line its strange authority: the indictment is coming from a former custodian of the state’s legal order, someone who understands how power narrates itself into innocence.
Context matters because post-1945 U.S. foreign policy is inseparable from the Cold War’s moral alibi. Containment licensed coups, proxy wars, sanctions regimes, and “humanitarian” bombardments under the logic that the alternative was worse. Clark’s sentence refuses that bargain. By ranking policy above other postwar atrocities, he’s challenging the hierarchy of grief in American public life: whose lives count as grievable, whose violence is seen as structural, and how an empire keeps its conscience clean by outsourcing brutality to abstractions like “security.”
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Clark, Ramsey. (2026, January 14). The greatest crime since World War II has been U.S. foreign policy. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-crime-since-world-war-ii-has-been-us-161649/
Chicago Style
Clark, Ramsey. "The greatest crime since World War II has been U.S. foreign policy." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-crime-since-world-war-ii-has-been-us-161649/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The greatest crime since World War II has been U.S. foreign policy." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greatest-crime-since-world-war-ii-has-been-us-161649/. Accessed 5 Feb. 2026.






