Ocnus.Net
The Right's America-Hating Preacher
By Robert Parry, Consortium 2/6/08
May 2, 2008 - 2:51:31 PM
By
comparison, American progressives have short-changed their own investments in
media. The disparity leads to the spectacle of Democratic presidential
candidates submitting to questioning on Fox News while no one would expect a
Republican leader to undergo interrogation from, say, the DailyKos.
On
another level, this media imbalance has propelled the rantings of the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright into the category of big news, effectively altering the course
of Campaign 2008 by associating Barack Obama with his ex-pastor’s harsh – and
at times over-the-top – criticism of the U.S. government.
However,
it’s not news that a viciously anti-American religious figure has invested
billions of dollars in financing the U.S. conservative movement and put fat
wads of cash into the pockets of many prominent Republicans, including members
of President George W. Bush’s own family.
While
Sen. Obama has to explain what he knew and when he knew it about Wright’s angry
sermons, the Bush Family floats above its financial and political associations
with the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, a South Korean theocrat who had denounced the
United States as “Satan’s harvest” and likened American women to “prostitutes.”
In
his angry sermons, Moon has gone further than saying “God-damn America” – as
Wright did – to vowing to sweep aside American democracy and individualism as
he builds a one-world state.
Once
his plan to “swallow entire America” is complete, Moon told his followers in
one sermon, there will be “some individuals who complain inside your stomach.
However, they will be digested.”
But
Moon’s hatred of America is not deemed news, in part, because Moon has financed
the Washington Times since 1982 to the tune of more than $3 billion, according
to former newspaper insider George Archibald.
Moon
also has lavished many millions of dollars more to pay for conservative
conferences and to bail out key right-wing figures when they have found
themselves in financial distress, including Republican direct-mail guru Richard
Viguerie and the late Jerry Falwell.
Plus,
Moon has paid large speaking fees to former President George H.W. Bush –
estimated in the millions of dollars – and has feted President George W. Bush’s
brother Neil at recent events for the Moon-sponsored Universal Peace
Federation.
In
2004, thankful Republicans even gave Moon use of a room in the Senate Dirksen
Office Building so he could be crowned the “King of Peace” in a ceremony that
Moon’s followers hailed as proof the U.S. government was bowing down to this
new Messiah. [See John Gorenfeld’s
Bad
Moon Rising.]
Yet,
even though Moon has gained influence by funneling huge sums of mysterious
money into the U.S. political process – and to the Bush Family – he has avoided
the intense scrutiny that has fallen on Rev. Wright, who until recently was a
little-known black preacher from Chicago’s South Side.
While
the YouTube snippets of several Wright outbursts have become daily fare on U.S.
news programs, Moon’s influence on the American Right and his largesse toward
the Bush Family have remained virtual non-stories. That’s been the case even
though Moon may represent a key nexus between international crime and the U.S.
political elite.
When
Moon is discussed, he’s usually presented as simply the wacky Unification
Church cult leader who somehow parlayed carnation sales by his followers into a
vast global fortune.
What
is almost never referenced are his long-standing ties to organized crime and
international drug smuggling, including the Japanese
yakuza gangs and South
American cocaine traffickers. Even first-hand accounts of Moon’s
money-laundering from insiders like his former daughter-in-law Nansook Hong
draw no U.S. media attention.
Who Is Moon?
Moon
was born on Jan. 6, 1920, in a rural, northwestern corner of Korea, a rugged
Asian peninsula then occupied by Japan, a brutal occupation that would continue
through the first 25 years of Moon’s life. Allied forces liberated the
peninsula from the Japanese in 1945 and then divided Korea into two sections,
the south controlled by the United States and the north occupied by Soviet
troops.
In
this post-war period, Moon, who had been raised within a Christian sect, moved
to southern Korea and joined a mystical religious group called Israel Suo-won.
The group preached the imminent arrival of a Korean Messiah and practiced a
strange sexual ritual called “pikarume,” in which ministers purified women
through sexual intercourse, the so-called “blessing of the womb.”
As
he developed his own theology, Moon returned to the North, to communist-ruled
North Korea, where he soon ran into legal troubles. North Korean authorities
arrested him twice, apparently on morals charges connected to his sexual rites
with young women. Moon’s supporters, however, have tried to portray Moon as the
victim of communist repression, claiming that he was arrested not for sex
charges but for espionage.
Whatever
the real story about his detention in North Korea, Moon’s luck soon changed. On
Oct. 14, 1950, with war raging on the Korean peninsula, United Nations troops
overran the prison where Moon was held, freeing Moon and the other inmates.
According to Unification Church histories, Moon then trekked south, carrying on
his back an injured prisoner named Pak Chung Hwa.
For
years, church officials even published a photograph purportedly showing Pak
piggy-backing on Moon across a river. But much of that story appears to be
propaganda. Several church sources have since admitted that the photo was a
hoax, that Moon is not the man in the picture and the location is not where
Moon was.
Moon’s southward journey ended in the South Korean port of Pusan, where he
resumed his missionary work. He later moved to Seoul, South Korea’s capital,
where he founded his own church in May 1954. He called it T’ong-il Kyo, or Holy
Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity. It became known
as the Unification Church.
At the center of Moon’s theology was a new twist to the Old Testament story
about the Fall of Man. Instead of biting into a forbidden apple, Eve copulated
with Satan and then passed on the sin by having sex with Adam.
Thousands
of years later, God sent Jesus to restore man to his original purity, Moon
taught. But Jesus failed because he was betrayed by the Jews and died before he
could father any sinless children.
Sex,
therefore, remained at the center of Moon’s theology, the need for a Messiah to
purify the human race through the reversal of the contamination caused by
Satan’s seduction of Eve.
Moon taught that the failure of Jesus to begin this purification process by
fathering children forced God to send a second Messiah, who turned out to be
Moon himself. Moon saw his task as starting this sexual purification process
and thus establishing God’s Kingdom on Earth.
The
ultimate goal would be a worldwide theocracy ruled by Moon and his followers
cleansed of Satan’s influence. Political power and religious authority went
together, Moon lectured. “We cannot separate the political field from the
religious,” Moon said.
But
in South Korea, Moon found that government continued to be an obstacle to his
religious plans. When he began to concentrate his religious recruitment on
young idealistic college students, especially from an all-girls Christian
school, Moon landed in legal hot water again.
The
South Korean government arrested Moon in 1955 for allegedly conducting more
sexual “purification” rites, according to several U.S. intelligence reports
which are now public. Moon was freed three months later because none of the
young women would testify for fear of public humiliation, according to an
undated FBI summary, released under a Freedom of Information Act request.
“During
the next two years in the national news media of South Korea, Rev. Moon was the
butt of scandalist humor,” the FBI report said.
Six Marys
Church
officials repeatedly have denied the reports of Moon’s sexual rituals. But the
charges received new attention in 1993 with the Japanese publication of
The Tragedy of the Six Marys
-- a book by the early Moon disciple, Pak Chung Hwa, whom Moon supposedly
carried to South Korea.
According
to Pak’s book, Moon taught that Jesus was intended to save mankind by having
sex with six already-married women who would then have sex with other men who
would pass on the purification to other women until, eventually, all mankind
would have pure blood.
Pak contended that Moon took on this personal duty as the second Messiah and
began having sex with the “six Marys.” But Pak alleged that Moon began to abuse
the practice by turning the “six Marys” into a kind of rotating sex club.
Pak wrote that Moon’s first wife divorced him after catching him in a sex
ritual.
In
all, Pak estimated that there were at least 60 “Marys,” many of whom ended up
destitute after Moon discarded them.
According to the testimony of one “Mary,” named Yu Shin Hee, she met Moon in
the early 1950s and became a follower along with her husband. Devoted to the
church, her husband abandoned her and her five children, whom she then put into
an orphanage. She, in turn, agreed to become one of Moon’s “six Marys.”
But
Yu Shin Hee claimed that Moon tired of her after just one “blood exchange,” a
phrase referring to sexual intercourse. Still, she was required to have sex
with other men. Seven years later, a broken woman with no money, she tried to
return to her children, but they also rejected her.
When Moon impregnated another one of the women, Moon sent her to Japan where
she gave birth to a baby boy, according to Pak’s account. Moon later admitted
fathering the child, who died in a train crash at the age of 13. But Pak wrote
that Moon refused to admit responsibility for other illegitimate children born
to the women.
“By
forwarding this teaching, he violated mothers, their daughters, their sisters,”
Pak wrote. (After
The
Tragedy of the Six Marys was published, the Unification Church
denounced the allegations as spurious. Under intense pressure, the aging Pak
Chung Hwa agreed to recant. However, his book’s accounts tracked closely with
U.S. intelligence reports of the same period and interviews with former church
leaders.)
Moon’s
history of sexual liaisons out of wedlock also was corroborated by
daughter-in-law Nansook Hong, who broke with Moon’s so-called True Family in
1995 over abuse she suffered at the hands of Moon’s eldest son, Hyo Jin Moon,
during their 14-year marriage.
Nansook
Hong reported in her 1998 book,
In
the Shadow of the Moons, that family members, including Moon
himself, acknowledged that he had “providential” sex with women in his role as
the Messiah. Nansook Hong said she learned about Moon’s sexual affairs when her
husband, Hyo Jin, began justifying his affairs as mandated by God, as his
father claimed his affairs were.
“I
went directly to Mrs. Moon with Hyo Jin’s claims,” Nansook Hong wrote. “She was
both furious and tearful. She had hoped that such pain would end with her, that
it would not be passed on to the next generation, she told me.
“No
one knows the pain of a straying husband like True Mother, she assured me. I
was stunned. We had all heard rumors for years about Sun Myung Moon’s affairs
and the children he sired out of wedlock, but here was True Mother, confirming
the truth of these stories.
“I
told her that Hyo Jin said his sleeping around was ‘providential’ and inspired
by God, just as Father’s affairs were. ‘No, Father is the Messiah, not Hyo Jin.
What Father did was in God’s plan.’” Later, in a discussion about the
extramarital sex, Moon himself told Nansook Hong that “what happened in his
past was ‘providential,’” she wrote.
As
for the sexual purification rituals, Nansook Hong said the rumors had followed
the church for decades, despite the official denials.
“In
the early days of the Unification Church, members met in a small house with two
rooms,” Nansook Hong wrote. “It was known as the House of the Three Doors. It
was rumored that at the first door one was made to take off one’s jacket, at
the second door one’s outer clothing, and at the third one’s undergarments in
preparation for sex.”
As
for Chung Hwa Pak’s
Tragedy
of the Six Marys, Nansook Hong said Moon succeeded in persuading
his old associate to rejoin the church and then got him to disavow the memoir.
“I’ve always wondered what the price was of that retraction,” Nansook Hong
wrote.
Madeleine
Pretorious, a Unification Church member from South Africa, also had worked
closely with Moon’s temperamental son, Hyo Jin, and had learned from him that
the long-denied accounts of Moon’s sexual rites with female initiates were
true.
“When
Hyo Jin found out about his father’s ‘purification’ rituals, that took a lot
out of wind out of his sails,” Pretorious told me in an interview after she
left the church in the mid-1990s.
In
late 1994, during conversations in Hyo Jin's suite at the New Yorker Hotel,
"he confided a lot of things to me," Pretorious said. Hyo Jin also
had discovered that the Reverend Moon fathered a child out of wedlock in the
early 1970s. Moon arranged for the child to be raised by his longtime
lieutenant Bo Hi Pak, Pretorious said.
The
boy – now a young man – had confronted Hyo Jin, seeking recognition as Hyo
Jin's half-brother. Pretorious said she later corroborated the story with other
church members.
Intelligence Ties
The
alleged sexual rituals, which involved passing around women, would become a
point of embarrassment later, but the practices apparently helped the
Unification Church in recruiting men in the early days.
By
the late 1950s, Moon had managed to build a small cadre of loyal followers and
was reaching out beyond Korea. By the early 1960s, the church also was pulling
in better educated young men, including some with connections to South Korea's
intelligence services.
Kim
Jong-Pil and three other young English-speaking army officers became closely
associated with Moon's church during this transitional phase as the institution
evolved from an obscure Korean sect into a powerful international organization.
Beyond
his association with Moon’s sect, Kim Jong-Pil was a rising star in South
Korea’s intelligence community. In 1961, he founded the KCIA, which centralized
Seoul's internal and external intelligence activities. Another one of the
promising young KCIA officers was Colonel Bo Hi Pak, who also became a
dedicated Moon disciple.
With these KCIA officers, however, it was never clear whether the benefits of
the religion were paramount or if they simply recognized the potential that an
international church held as a cover for intelligence operations.
In
many countries, especially the United States, churches are granted broad
protections against government interference. With missionaries traveling around
the world and with church members attending international religious
conferences, a church also provided an effective cover for spying,
money-laundering or passing on messages to agents.
In
1962, KCIA founder Kim Jong-Pil traveled to San Francisco where he met with
Unification Church members. According to an account later published by a
congressional investigation, Kim Jong-Pil promised discreet support for Moon's
church.
At
the same time of his contacts with associates from the Unification Church, Kim
Jong-Pil was in charge of another sensitive negotiation: talks to improve
bilateral relations with Japan, Korea’s historic enemy.
Those
talks put Kim Jong-Pil in touch with two other important figures in the Far
East, Japanese rightists Yoshio Kodama and Ryoichi Sasakawa, who once hailed
Italian dictator Benito Mussolini as "the perfect fascist."
Kodama
and Sasakawa were jailed as fascist war criminals at the end of World War II,
but a few years later, both Kodama and Sasakawa were freed by U.S. military
intelligence officials.
The
U.S. government turned to Kodama and Sasakawa for help in combating communist
labor unions and student strikes, much as the CIA worked with the Italian Mafia
in breaking communist-backed unions and protected German Nazi war criminals if
they agreed to help in the emerging Cold War. Kodama and Sasakawa assisted U.S.
intelligence by dispatching right-wing goon squads to break up demonstrations,
according to the book,
Yakuza,
by David E. Kaplan and Alec Dubro.
Kodama
and Sasakawa also allegedly grew rich from their association with the
yakuza, a shadowy
organized crime syndicate that profited off drug smuggling, gambling and prostitution
in Japan and Korea. Behind the scenes, Kodama and Sasakawa became power-brokers
in Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
Kim
Jong-Pil's contacts with these right-wing leaders proved invaluable to the Unification
Church, which had made only a few converts in Japan by the early 1960s.
Immediately after Kim Jong-Pil opened the door to Kodama and Sasakawa in late
1962, 50 leaders of an ultra-nationalist Japanese Buddhist sect converted
en masse to the Unification
Church, according to Kaplan and Dubro.
"Sasakawa
became an advisor to Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Japanese branch of the
Unification Church" and collaborated with Moon in building far-right
anti-communist organizations in Asia, Kaplan and Dubro wrote.
The
church's growth spurt did not escape the notice of U.S. intelligence officers
in the field. One CIA report, dated Feb. 26, 1963, stated that "Kim
Jong-Pil organized the Unification Church while he was director of the ROK
[Republic of Korea] Central Intelligence Agency, and has been using the church,
which had a membership of 27,000, as a political tool."
Though
Moon's church had existed since the mid-1950s, the report appeared correct in
noting Kim Jong-Pil's key role in transforming the church from a minor Korean
sect into a potent international organization.
New Worlds
With
alliances in place in Tokyo and Seoul, the Unification Church next took aim at
Washington.
In
1964, Bo Hi Pak, who was emerging as one of Moon’s most able lieutenants, moved
to America and started the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation, a front that
performed the dual purpose of helping Moon meet important Americans, while
assisting the KCIA in its international operations.
Bo
Hi Pak named KCIA founder Kim Jong-Pil to be the foundation's "honorary
chairman." The foundation also sponsored the KCIA’s anti-communist
propaganda outlets, such as Radio of Free Asia, according to the congressional
report on the “Koreagate” scandal.
Moon's
church also was active in the Asian People's Anti-Communist League, a fiercely
right-wing group founded by the governments of South Korea and Taiwan. In 1966,
the group expanded into the World Anti-Communist League, an international
alliance that brought together traditional conservatives with former Nazis,
overt racialists and Latin American “death squad” operatives.
Retired
U.S. Army Gen. John K. Singlaub, a former WACL president, told me that “the
Japanese [WACL] chapter was taken over almost entirely by Moonies.”
By
the 1970s, the U.S. public was aware of Moon and his church, but much of the
attention was negative. Parents complained that the church brainwashed their
children and pressured them to cut off contacts with their families, while
proclaiming Moon their “True Father.”
The
totalitarian nature of Moon's church stood out in his staging of mass
marriages, or "blessings," in which he would pair up husbands and
wives who had never met. Moon also regulated the sexual behavior of even his
married followers, a practice that replaced the more personal method of
“blessing the womb” that allegedly had prevailed in the church’s early days.
In
1973, amid American military reversals in Indochina, alarm began to spread
within Seoul’s right-wing dictatorship about the strength of the U.S.
commitment to defend South Korea in case of aggression from the communist
North. Those fears led the KCIA, long known for its gross human rights
violations, to begin plotting how to bolster its political friends in the
United States and undermine its enemies.
Lee
Jai Hyon, the chief cultural and information attaché at the South Korean
embassy in Washington, later testified before the U.S. Congress that he sat in
on a series of meetings chaired by the KCIA’s station chief, involving senior
embassy officials.
Lee
Jai Hyon described six sessions over a five-week period in spring 1973 at which
a conspiracy was outlined to “manipulate,” “coerce,” “threaten,” “co-opt,”
“seduce,” and “buy off” political and other leaders of the United States. Lee
Jai Hyon said one of the South Koreans participating in the operation was
Moon's top aide Bo Hi Pak.
At
the time, Moon was raising concerns among U.S. immigration authorities for
bringing hundreds of foreign followers to the United States on tourist visas
and then assigning them to mobile fund-raising teams.
But
Moon, who owned property outside New York City while maintaining a residence in
South Korea, somehow managed to secure a “green card” from the Nixon
administration on April 30, 1973. The permit making Moon a “lawful permanent
resident” also granted him more legal rights than would be available to a
foreign visitor.
“The
advantages of using the First Amendment were seen early,” wrote Robert
Boettcher, the former staff director of the House Subcommittee on International
Relations, in his 1980 book,
Gifts
of Deceit. “Before Moon moved to the United States in 1971, he and
his small band of followers realized the operation would have the most
flexibility if it was called a church. Businesses, political activities, and
tax-exempt status could be protected.”
As
Moon stepped up his activities, however, the FBI soon began to suspect that
Moon’s activities had a political motive. The FBI summary of its evidence about
Moon’s church was marked by a number indicating that the Unification Church was
under a counter-intelligence investigation in the 1970s.
Although
blacked-out portions obscured who was stating some of the conclusions – an
individual source or the FBI – the report described the church as "an
absolutely totalitarian organization" which was part of an international
"conspiracy" that functioned by its own rules.
"One
of the central doctrines of the Moon relig[i]ous aspects is what they call
heavenly deception,” the FBI report said. “It basically says that to take from
Satan what rightfully belongs to God, you may do most anything. You may lie,
cheat, steal or kill."
Making Friends
Despite
the FBI's concerns, Moon began making friends in Washington the old-fashioned
way: by spreading around lots of money. Moon also had his followers cozy up to government
officials.
According
to the FBI summary, Moon designated "300 pretty girls" to lobby
members of Congress. "They were trying to influence United States senators
and congressmen on behalf of South Korea," the FBI document read.
"Moon
had laid the foundation for political work in this country prior to 1973
[though] his followers became more openly involved in political activities in
that and subsequent years," a congressional investigative report on the
"Koreagate" influence-buying scandal stated in 1978.
The
report added that Moon's organization used his followers' travels to smuggle
large sums of money into the United States in apparent violation of federal
currency laws.
Moon
organized rallies in support of the Vietnam War and in defense of President
Richard Nixon during the Watergate scandal. Moon sponsored a National Prayer
and Fast Committee, using the slogan: "forgive, love, unite." The
public rallies earned Moon a face-to-face "thank you" from the
embattled President on Feb. 1, 1974.
In
late 1975, the CIA intercepted a secret South Korean document entitled
"1976 Plan for Operations in the United States." In the name of
"strengthening the execution of the U.S. security commitment to the ROK
[South Korea]," it called for influencing U.S. public opinion by
penetrating American media, government and academia.
Thousands of dollars were earmarked for "special manipulation" of
congressmen; their staffs were to be infiltrated with paid
"collaborators"; an "intelligence network" was to be put
into the White House; money was targeted for "manipulation" of
officials at the Pentagon, State Department and CIA; some U.S. journalists were
to be spied on, while others would be paid; a "black newspaper" would
be started in New York; contacts with American scholars would be coordinated
"with Psychological Warfare Bureau"; and "an organizational
network of anti-communist fronts" would be created.
Several months later, in summer 1976, Moon returned to the United States and
delivered a flattering pro-U.S. speech at a red-white-and-blue flag-draped
rally at the Washington Monument.
"The
United States of America, transcending race and nationality, is already a model
of the unified world," Moon declared on Sept. 18, 1976. Calling America
"the chosen nation of God," Moon said, "I not only respect
America, but truly love this nation."
While professing his love for America in public, Moon shared with his followers
a very different sentiment in private. He despised American concepts of
individuality and democracy, believing that he was destined to rule through a
one-world theocracy that would eradicate all personal freedoms.
"Here's
a man [Moon] who says he wants to take over the world, where all religions will
be abolished except Unificationism, all languages will be abolished except
Korean, all governments will be abolished except his one-world theocracy,"
Steve Hassan, a former church leader, told me. "Yet he's wined and dined
very powerful people and convinced them that he's benign."
In 1976, Moon’s search for growing influence in the United States seemed to be
following the KCIA script.
Moon
started a small-circulation newspaper in New York City that featured a column
by civil rights leader Jesse Jackson. Moon promoted the anti-communist cause
through front groups which held lavish conferences and paid speaking fees to
academics, journalists and political leaders.
In
1976, Moon, Bo Hi Pak and other church members deepened their investments in
the U.S. capital, buying stock in the Washington-based Diplomat National Bank.
Simultaneously, South Korean agent Tongsun Park was investing heavily in the
same bank.
But
the South Korean scheme backfired in the late 1970s with the explosion of the
"Koreagate" scandal. Rep.Donald Fraser, a Democrat from Minnesota,
led a congressional probe which tracked Tongsun Park's influence-buying
campaign and exposed the KCIA links to the Unification Church.
The
“Koreagate” investigation revealed a sophisticated intelligence project run out
of Seoul that used the urbane Park as well as the mystical Moon to cultivate
U.S. politicians as influential friends of South Korea – and conversely to
undermine politicians who were viewed as enemies.
Though
it's clear the church did collaborate with the KCIA during the 1960s and 1970s,
it's less clear whether Moon was using the KCIA or it was using him. Most
likely, the relationship was symbiotic, each using the other to advance their
overlapping but different interests.
The
alliance with the KCIA gave Moon political protection and business
opportunities, while the KCIA got a cover for promoting South Korean interests
inside the United States, the country responsible for South Korea's defense.
The “Koreagate” investigation traced the church's chief sources of money to
bank accounts in Japan, but could follow the cash no further. In the years
since, the sources of Moon’s money have remained cloaked in secrecy.
In
the mid-1990s when I inquired about the vast fortune that the Unification
Church has poured into its American operations, the church's chief spokesman
refused to divulge dollar amounts for any of Moon's activities.
"Each
year the church retains an independent accounting firm to do a national audit
and produce an annual financial statement," wrote the church’s legal
representative Peter D. Ross. "While this statement is used in routine
financial transactions by the church, [it] is not my policy to make it
otherwise available."
In 1978, Fraser got a taste of the negative side of Moon’s propaganda clout as
the South Korean religious leader’s new U.S. conservative allies mounted a
strong defense against the “Koreagate” allegations.
In
pro-Moon publications, Fraser and his staff were pilloried as leftists.
Anti-Moon witnesses were assailed as unstable liars. Minor bookkeeping problems
inside the investigation, such as Fraser's salary advances to some staff
members, were seized upon to justify demands for an ethics probe of the
congressman.
One
of those letters, dated June 30, 1978, was written by John T. "Terry"
Dolan of the National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC). Dolan's
group was pioneering the strategy of "independent" TV attack ads
against liberal Democrats. In turn, Moon's CAUSA International helped Dolan by
contributing $500,000 to a Dolan group, known as the Conservative Alliance or
CALL. [Washington Post, Sept. 17, 1984]
With
support from Dolan and other conservatives, Moon weathered the “Koreagate”
political storm. Facing right-wing challenges to his patriotism, Fraser lost a
Senate bid in 1978 and left Congress.
Though
Moon had helped defeat his chief congressional critic, the evidence unearthed
by Fraser became the foundation of a tax-fraud conviction of Moon in 1982 and
his sentencing to two years in federal prison.
A Media Empire
Despite
his felony conviction, Moon pressed ahead with his boldest bid for political
influence. In 1982, Moon launched the Washington Times.
The
Times was just what the Reagan administration wanted, a reliable voice for its
version of events that would push the message into the public debate.
Though
Moon would have to subsidize his publications with hundreds of millions of
dollars from his seemingly bottomless pool of cash, the newspaper – over the
next two decades – would change the parameters of how the U.S. press corps
works and would affect the course of U.S. presidential campaigns.
Where
all that money came from, however, would remain one of Washington’s least
examined secrets.
Authors
Scott Anderson and Jon Lee Anderson wrote in their 1986 book,
Inside the League, that
Sun Myung Moon was one of five indispensable Asian leaders who made the World
Anti-Communist League possible.
The
five were Taiwan’s dictator Chiang Kai-shek, South Korea’s dictator Park Chung
Hee,
yakuza
gangsters Ryoichi Sasakawa and Yoshio Kodama, and Moon, “an evangelist who
planned to take over the world through the doctrine of ‘Heavenly Deception,’”
the Andersons wrote.
WACL
became a well-financed worldwide organization after a secret meeting between
Sasakawa and Moon, along with two Kodama representatives, on a lake in
Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan. The purpose of the meeting was to create an
anti-communist organization that “would further Moon’s global crusade and lend
the Japanese
yakuza
leaders a respectable new façade,” the Andersons wrote.
Mixing
organized crime and political extremism, of course, has a long tradition
throughout the world. Violent political movements often have blended with
criminal operations as a way to arrange covert funding, move operatives or
acquire weapons.
Drug
smuggling has proven to be a particularly effective way to fill the coffers of
extremist movements, especially those that find ways to insinuate themselves
within more legitimate operations of sympathetic governments or intelligence
services.
In
the quarter century after World War II, remnants of fascist movements managed
to do just that. Shattered by the major Allies – the United States, Great
Britain and the Soviet Union – the surviving fascists got a new lease on
political life with the start of the Cold War, helping both Western democracies
and right-wing dictatorships battle international communism.
Some
Nazi leaders faced war-crimes tribunals after World War II, but others managed
to make their escapes along “rat lines” to Spain or South America or they
finagled intelligence relationships with the victorious powers, especially the
United States.
Argentina
became a natural haven given the pre-war alliance that existed between the
European fascists and prominent Argentine military leaders, such as Juan Peron.
The fleeing Nazis also found like-minded right-wing politicians and military
officers across Latin America who already used repression to keep down the
indigenous populations and the legions of the poor.
In
the post-World War II years, some Nazi war criminals chose reclusive lives, but
others, such as former SS officer Klaus Barbie, sold their intelligence skills
to less-sophisticated security services in countries like Bolivia or Paraguay.
Other Nazis on the lam trafficked in narcotics. Often the lines crossed between
intelligence operations and criminal conspiracies.
Auguste
Ricord, a French war criminal who had collaborated with the Gestapo, set up
shop in Paraguay and opened up the French Connection heroin channels to
American Mafia drug kingpin Santo Trafficante Jr., who controlled much of the
heroin traffic into the United States. Columns by Jack Anderson identified
Ricord’s accomplices as some of Paraguay’s highest-ranking military officers.
Another
French Connection mobster, Christian David, relied on protection of Argentine
authorities. While trafficking in heroin, David also “took on assignments for
Argentina’s terrorist organization, the Argentine Anti-Communist Alliance,”
Henrik Kruger wrote in
The
Great Heroin Coup.
During
President Nixon’s “war on drugs,” U.S. authorities smashed the famous French
Connection and won extraditions of Ricord and David in 1972 to face justice in
the United States.
By
the time the French Connection was severed, however, powerful Mafia drug lords
had forged strong ties to South America’s military leaders. An infrastructure
for the multi-billion-dollar drug trade, servicing the insatiable U.S. market,
was in place.
Trafficante-connected
groups also recruited displaced anti-Castro Cubans, who had ended up in Miami,
needed work, and possessed some useful intelligence skills gained from the
CIA’s training for the Bay of Pigs and other clandestine operations. Heroin
from the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia soon filled the void left by the
broken French Connection and its mostly Middle Eastern heroin supply routes.
Enter Rev. Moon
During
this time of transition, Sun Myung Moon brought his evangelical message to
South America. His first visit to Argentina had occurred in 1965 when he
blessed a square behind the presidential Pink House in Buenos Aires. But he
returned a decade later to make more lasting friendships.
Moon
first sank down roots in Uruguay during the 12-year reign of right-wing
military dictators who seized power in 1973. He also cultivated close relations
with military dictators in Argentina, Paraguay and Chile, reportedly
ingratiating himself with the juntas by helping the military regimes arrange
arms purchases and by channeling money to allied right-wing organizations.
“Relationships
nurtured with right-wing Latin Americans in the [World Anti-Communist] League
led to acceptance of the [Unification] Church’s political and propaganda
operations throughout Latin America,” the Andersons wrote in
Inside the League.
“As
an international money laundry, … the Church tapped into the capital flight
havens of Latin America. Escaping the scrutiny of American and European
investigators, the Church could now funnel money into banks in Honduras,
Uruguay and Brazil, where official oversight was lax or nonexistent.”
In
1980, Moon made more friends in South America when a right-wing alliance of
Bolivia military officers and drug dealers organized what became known as the
Cocaine Coup. WACL associates, such as Alfred Candia, coordinated the arrival
of some of the paramilitary operatives who assisted in the violent putsch.
In
Bolivia, right-wing Argentine intelligence officers mixed with a contingent of
young European neo-fascists collaborating with Nazi war criminal Barbie in
carrying out the bloody coup that overthrew the elected left-of-center
government.
The
victory put into power a right-wing military dictatorship indebted to the drug
lords. Bolivia became South America’s first narco-state.
One
of the first well-wishers arriving in La Paz to congratulate the new government
was Moon’s top lieutenant, Bo Hi Pak. The Moon organization published a photo
of Pak meeting with the new strongman, General Garcia Meza.
After
the visit to the mountainous capital, Pak declared, “I have erected a throne
for Father Moon in the world’s highest city.”
According to later Bolivian government and newspaper reports, a Moon
representative invested about $4 million in preparations for the coup.
Bolivia’s WACL representatives also played key roles, and CAUSA, one of Moon’s
anti-communist organizations, listed as members nearly all the leading Bolivian
coup-makers.
Soon,
Colonel Luis Arce-Gomez, a coup organizer and the cousin of cocaine kingpin
Roberto Suarez, went into partnership with big narco-traffickers, including
Trafficante’s Cuban-American smugglers. Nazi war criminal Barbie and his young
neo-fascist followers found new work protecting Bolivia’s major cocaine barons
and transporting drugs to the border.
“The
paramilitary units – conceived by Barbie as a new type of SS – sold themselves
to the cocaine barons,” German journalist Kai Hermann wrote. “The attraction of
fast money in the cocaine trade was stronger than the idea of a national
socialist revolution in Latin America.” [An English translation of Hermann’s
article was published in Covert Action Information Bulletin, Winter 1986]
A
month after the Cocaine Coup, General Garcia Meza participated in the Fourth
Congress of the Latin American Anti-Communist Confederation, an arm of the
World Anti-Communist League. Also attending that Fourth Congress was WACL
president Woo Jae Sung, a leading Moon disciple.
As
the drug lords consolidated their power in Bolivia, the Moon organization
expanded its presence, too. Hermann reported that in early 1981, war criminal
Barbie and Moon leader Thomas Ward were seen together in apparent prayer.
On May 31, 1981, Moon representatives sponsored a CAUSA reception at the
Sheraton Hotel’s Hall of Freedom in La Paz. Moon’s lieutenant Bo Hi Pak and
Bolivian strongman Garcia Meza led a prayer for President Reagan’s recovery
from an assassination attempt.
In
his speech, Bo Hi Pak declared, “God had chosen the Bolivian people in the
heart of South America as the ones to conquer communism.” According to a later
Bolivian intelligence report, the Moon organization sought to recruit an “armed
church” of Bolivians, with about 7,000 Bolivians receiving some paramilitary
training.
But
by late 1981, the cocaine taint of Bolivia’s military junta was so deep and the
corruption so staggering that U.S.-Bolivian relations were stretched to the
breaking point.
“The
Moon sect disappeared overnight from Bolivia as clandestinely as they had
arrived,” Hermann reported.
The Cocaine Coup leaders soon found themselves on the run, too. Interior
Minister Arce-Gomez was eventually extradited to Miami and was sentenced to 30
years in prison for drug trafficking. Drug lord Roberto Suarez got a 15-year
prison term. General Garcia Meza became a fugitive from a 30-year sentence
imposed on him in Bolivia for abuse of power, corruption and murder. Barbie was
returned to France to face a life sentence for war crimes. He died in 1992.
But Moon’s organization suffered few negative repercussions from the Cocaine
Coup. By the early 1980s, flush with seemingly unlimited funds, Moon had moved
on to promoting himself with the new Republican administration in Washington.
An invited guest to the Reagan-Bush Inauguration, Moon made his organization
useful to President Reagan, Vice President Bush and other leading Republicans.
Domestic Spying
An
early concern of the Reagan administration was the possibility that a popular
movement – similar to the anti-Vietnam War protests – would undermine the
hard-line policies that the new U.S. government considered indispensable for
stopping the spread of Soviet influence in Central America.
Staunch
anticommunists in the administration also suspected that some groups opposed to
U.S. intervention in the region could be discredited for holding suspect
political loyalties. Though Moon’s organization itself had been exposed by the
“Koreagate” investigation as a foreign intelligence operation, the
administration still turned to it to help probe the loyalty of Americans.
Starting
in 1981, the FBI cooperated with one of Moon’s front groups during a five-year
nationwide investigation of the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El
Salvador (CISPES), a domestic organization critical of Reagan’s policies in
Central America.
According
to FBI documents obtained by Boston Globe reporter Ross Gelbspan, the FBI
collected reports from Moon’s Collegiate Association for the Research of
Principles (CARP), which was spying on CISPES supporters. The reports came from
CARP members at 10 university campuses around the United States and included
commentaries on the purported political beliefs of Reagan’s critics. [Boston
Globe, April 20, 1988]
One
CARP report called a CISPES supporter “well-educated in Marxism” while other
CARP reports attached “clippings culled from communist-inspired front groups.”
The Globe investigation reported that Frank Varelli, who worked for the FBI
from 1981 to 1984 coordinating the CISPES probe, said an FBI agent paid members
of the Moon organization at Southern Methodist University while the Moon
activists were raiding and disrupting CISPES rallies.
“Every
week, an agent I worked with used to go to SMU to pay the Moonies,” Varelli
said in an interview. Because of the CARP harassment, CISPES closed its SMU
chapter.
While
Moon’s organization was helping to spy on American citizens, the case against
Moon as a suspected intelligence agent for South Korea was petering out. It’s
still not clear why.
“I don’t think there was any doubt that the Moon newspaper took a virulently
pro-South Korea position,” Oliver “Buck” Revell, then a senior FBI official in
the national security area, told me. “But whether there was something illegal
about it...” His voice trailed off. As for the internal security investigation
of Moon, Revell added only: “It led its full life.”
Cash Source
Where
Moon gets his cash has been a long-time mystery that few American conservatives
have been eager to solve.
“Some
Moonie-watchers even believe that some of the business enterprises are actually
covers for drug trafficking,” wrote Scott and Jon Lee Anderson. “Others feel
that, despite the disclosures of Koreagate, the Church has simply continued to
do the Korean government’s international bidding and is receiving official
funds to do so.”
While
Moon’s representatives have refused to detail how they’ve sustained their
far-flung activities – including many businesses that insiders say lose money –
Moon’s spokesmen have angrily denied recurring allegations about profiteering
off illegal trafficking in weapons and drugs.
In
a typical response to a gun-running question by the Argentine newspaper,
Clarin, Moon’s
representative Ricardo DeSena responded, “I deny categorically these
accusations and also the barbarities that are said about drugs and
brainwashing. Our movement responds to the harmony of the races, nations and
religions and proclaims that the family is the school of love.” [
Clarin, July 7, 1996]
Without
doubt, however, Moon’s organization has had a long record of association with
organized crime figures, including ones implicated in the drug trade. Besides collaborating
with Sasakawa and other leaders of the Japanese
yakuza and the Cocaine Coup government of
Bolivia, Moon’s organization developed close ties with the Honduran military
and the Nicaraguan contra movement which was permeated with drug smugglers.
Moon’s
organization also used its political clout in Washington to intimidate or
discredit government officials and journalists who tried to investigate those
criminal activities. In the mid-1980s, for instance
, when journalists
and congressional investigators began probing the evidence of contra-connected
drug trafficking, they came under attacks from Moon’s Washington Times.
An
Associated Press story that I co-wrote with Brian Barger about a Miami-based
federal probe into gun- and drug-running by the contras was denigrated in an
April 11, 1986, front-page Washington Times article with the headline: “Story
on [contra] drug smuggling denounced as political ploy.”
When Sen. John Kerry, D-Massachusetts, conducted a Senate probe and uncovered
additional evidence of contra-drug trafficking, the Washington Times denounced
him, too. The newspaper first published articles depicting Kerry’s probe as a
wasteful political witch hunt. “Kerry’s anti-contra efforts extensive,
expensive, in vain,” announced the headline of one Times article on Aug. 13,
1986.
But
when Kerry exposed more contra wrongdoing, the Washington Times shifted
tactics. In 1987 in front-page articles, it began accusing Kerry’s staff of
obstructing justice because their investigation was supposedly interfering with
Reagan-Bush administration efforts to get at the truth.
“Kerry
staffers damaged FBI probe,” said one Times article that opened with the
assertion: “Congressional investigators for Sen. John Kerry severely damaged a
federal drug investigation last summer by interfering with a witness while
pursuing allegations of drug smuggling by the Nicaraguan resistance, federal
law enforcement officials said.” [Washington Times, Jan. 21, 1987]
Despite
the attacks, Kerry’s contra-drug investigation eventually concluded that a
number of contra units – both in Costa Rica and Honduras – were implicated in
the cocaine trade.
“It
is clear that individuals who provided support for the contras were involved in
drug trafficking, the supply network of the contras was used by drug
trafficking organizations, and elements of the contras themselves knowingly
received financial and material assistance from drug traffickers,” Kerry’s
investigation stated in a report issued April 13, 1989. “In each case, one or
another agency of the U.S. government had information regarding the involvement
either while it was occurring or immediately thereafter.”
Kerry’s
investigation also found that Honduras had become an important way station for
cocaine shipments heading north during the contra war.
“Elements
of the Honduran military were involved ... in the protection of drug
traffickers from 1980 on,” the report said. “These activities were reported to
appropriate U.S. government officials throughout the period. Instead of moving
decisively to close down the drug trafficking by stepping up the DEA presence
in the country and using the foreign assistance the United States was extending
to the Hondurans as a lever, the United States closed the DEA office in
Tegucigalpa and appears to have ignored the issue.” [Drug, Law Enforcement and
Foreign Policy – the Kerry Report – December 1988]
The
Kerry investigation represented an indirect challenge to Vice President George
H.W. Bush, who had been named by President Reagan to head the South Florida Task
Force for interdicting the flow of drugs into the United States and was later
put in charge of the National Narcotics Border Interdiction System.
In
short, Bush was the lead official in the U.S. government to cope with the drug
trade, which he himself had dubbed a national security threat.
If
the American voters came to believe that Bush had compromised his anti-drug
responsibilities to protect the image of the Nicaraguan contras and other
rightists in Central America, that judgment could have threatened the political
future of Bush and his politically ambitious family.
By
publicly challenging press and congressional investigations of this touchy
subject, the Washington Times helped keep an unfavorable media spotlight from
swinging in the direction of the Vice President.
Drug Evidence
The
evidence shows that there was much more to the contra-drug issue than either
the Reagan-Bush administration or Moon’s organization wanted the American
people to know in the 1980s.
The
evidence – assembled over the years by investigators at the CIA, the Justice
Department and other federal agencies – indicates that Bolivia’s Cocaine Coup
operatives were only the first in a line of clever drug smugglers that tried to
squeeze under the protective umbrella of Reagan’s favorite covert operation,
the contra war. [For details, see Robert Parry,
Lost
History, or for a summary of the contra-drug evidence, see
Consortiumnews.com's "Gary Webb's Death:
American Tragedy."]
Other
cocaine smugglers soon followed, cozying up to the contras and sharing some of
the profits, as a way to minimize investigative interest by the Reagan-Bush law
enforcement agencies.
The
contra-connected smugglers included the Medellin cartel, the Panamanian
government of Manuel Noriega, the Honduran military, the Honduran-Mexican
smuggling ring of Ramon Matta Ballesteros, and the Miami-based anti-Castro
Cubans with their connections to Mafia operations throughout the United States.
The
drug traffickers’ strategy also worked. In some cases, U.S. intelligence
officials bent over backwards not to take timely notice of contra-connected
drug trafficking out of fear that fuller investigations would embarrass the
contras and their patrons in the Reagan-Bush administration.
For
instance, on Oct. 22, 1982, a cable written by the CIA’s Directorate of
Operations stated, “There are indications of links between [a U.S. religious
organization] and two Nicaraguan counter-revolutionary groups. These links
involve an exchange in [the United States] of narcotics for arms.”
The
cable added that the participants were planning a meeting in Costa Rica for
such a deal. When the cable arrived, senior CIA officials were concerned. On
Oct. 27, CIA headquarters asked for more information from a U.S. law
enforcement agency.
The
law enforcement agency expanded on its report by telling the CIA that
representatives of the contra FDN and another contra force, the UDN, would be
meeting with several unidentified U.S. citizens. But then, the CIA reversed
itself, deciding that it wanted no more information on the grounds that U.S.
citizens were involved.
“In
light of the apparent participation of U.S. persons throughout, agree you
should not pursue the matter further,” CIA headquarters wrote on Nov. 3, 1982.
Two weeks later, after discouraging additional investigation, CIA headquarters
suggested it might be necessary to knock down the allegations of a
guns-for-drugs deal as “misinformation.”
The
CIA’s Latin American Division, however, responded on Nov. 18, 1982, that
several contra officials had gone to San Francisco for the meetings with
supporters, presumably as part of the same guns-for-drugs deal. But the CIA
inspector general found no additional information about that deal in CIA files.
Also,
by keeping the names censored when the documents were released in 1998, the CIA
prevented outside investigators from examining whether the “U.S. religious
organization” had any affiliation with Moon’s network of quasi-religious
groups, which were assisting the contras at that time.
Red Flags
As
Moon continued to expand his influence in American politics, some Republicans
began to raise red flags.
In
1983, the GOP’s moderate Ripon Society charged that the New Right had entered
“an alliance of expediency” with Moon’s church. Ripon’s chairman, Rep. Jim
Leach of Iowa, released a study which alleged that the College Republican
National Committee “solicited and received” money from Moon’s Unification
Church in 1981. The study also accused Reed Irvine’s Accuracy in Media of
benefiting from low-cost or volunteer workers supplied by Moon.
Leach said the Unification Church has “infiltrated the New Right and the party
it wants to control, the Republican Party, and infiltrated the media as well.”
Leach’s news conference was disrupted when then-college GOP leader Grover
Norquist accused Leach of lying. (Norquist is now a prominent conservative
leader in Washington with close ties to the highest levels of George W. Bush’s
administration.)
Despite periodic fretting over Moon’s influence, American conservatives
continued to accept his deep-pocket assistance. When White House aide Oliver
North was scratching for support for the Nicaraguan contras, for instance, the
Washington Times established a contra fund-raising operation.
By the mid-1980s, Moon’s Unification Church had carved out a niche as an
acceptable part of the American Right. In one speech to his followers, Moon
boasted that “without knowing it, even President Reagan is being guided by
Father [Moon].”
Yet, Moon also made clear that his longer-range goal was destroying the U.S.
Constitution and America’s democratic form of government.
“History
will make the position of Reverend Moon clear, and his enemies, the American
population and government will bow down to him,” Moon said, speaking of himself
in the third person. “That is Father’s tactic, the natural subjugation of the
American government and population.”
In September 1987, conservative columnist Andrew Ferguson cited some of Moon’s
anti-American sentiments as cause for concern, despite his appealing
anticommunism.
“There
is little else in Unificationism that American conservatives will find
compelling,” except, of course, the money, Ferguson wrote in the
American Spectator.
“They’re the best in town as far as putting their money with their mouth is,”
Ferguson quoted one Washington-based conservative as saying.
Though Moon’s money sources remained shrouded in secrecy, his cash undeniably
gave the Right an edge over its political adversaries.
After
the Iran-Contra scandal exploded in fall 1986, the Washington Times and other
Moon-related organizations rushed to the battlements to defend Reagan’s White
House and Oliver North.
Ronald
S. Godwin, who was a link between Rev. Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority and
Moon’s Washington Times, raised funds for North through a group called the
Interamerican Partnership, which was a forerunner to North’s own Freedom
Alliance. [See Common Cause Magazine, Fall 1993]
Another Moon-connected group, the American Freedom Coalition, went to bat for
North. According to Andrew Leigh, who worked for a Moon front called Global
Image Associates, the American Freedom Coalition broadcast a pro-North video,
“Ollie North: Fight for Freedom,” more than 600 times on more than 100 TV
stations.
Leigh
quoted one coalition official as saying that AFC received $5 million to $6
million from business interests associated with Moon. AFC also bragged that it
helped put George H.W. Bush into the White House in 1988 by distributing 30
million pieces of political literature. [Washington Post, Oct. 15, 1989]
When
Vice President Bush was struggling in his 1988 presidential campaign against
Democratic nominee, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, Moon’s Washington Times
came to the rescue again publishing a slanted story about Dukakis’s mental
health.
Times
reporter Gene Grabowski had interviewed a Dukakis relative and asked whether
Dukakis had ever sought psychiatric help during a low period in his life. “It’s
possible, but I doubt it,” the relative responded.
Grabowski’s
editors, however, snipped out the phrase “but I doubt it” while keeping the
phrase “it’s possible” and then spotlighting the story under a headline,
“Dukakis Kin Hints at Sessions.”
Dukakis’s
supposedly questionable mental health became an important theme for the
Republicans. President Reagan personally underscored the message by referring
to Dukakis as a “cripple,” which forced more mainstream publications to reprise
the suspicions about the psychiatric treatment.
The
story spread doubts among the electorate about Dukakis’s fitness for office.
For his part, Grabowski, a former Associated Press reporter, resigned in
protest of the distortion, but by then the damage to Dukakis was done.
Weird Behavior
But
even as Moon consolidated his influence in Washington during the 12-year
Reagan-Bush reign, Moon’s weird behavior was splitting the church leadership
and making some American conservatives nervous.
In
1989, published reports disclosed that Moon had declared that one of his sons,
Heung Jin Moon who died in a car crash in 1984, had come back to life in the
body of a church member from Zimbabwe.
The
muscular African – known inside the church as the “black Heung Jin” – then
compelled church leaders to stand before him and engage in humiliating
self-criticisms, sometimes making them sing songs.
During one of these rituals in December 1988, the Zimbabwean severely beat
longtime Moon lieutenant Bo Hi Pak, who was then publisher of the Washington
Times. Pak reportedly suffered brain damage and impaired speech from the
assault, which church sources told me had been sanctioned by Moon after Pak had
fallen out of favor. Afterwards, Pak was transferred back to Asia.
Commenting
on the beating of Pak, former Washington Times editor William P. Cheshire
wrote, “Where the Moonies are concerned, it seems clear, we are dealing with
something besides just an exotic cult. The Pak beating smacks strongly of
Jonestown [the site of a mass murder-suicide by a religious cult].
“And
with Moon lavishing hundreds of millions of dollars a year on newspapers,
magazines and political-action groups in this country and abroad, such occult
and aggressive practices give rise to secular apprehensions. If the
‘reincarnation’ doesn’t rock those conservative shops that have been taking
money from Moon, not even fire-breathing dragons would disturb them.” [San
Diego Union-Tribune, April 9, 1989]
But Moon’s organization had proved itself too valuable to be cast aside,
regardless of the strange behavior and the questionable sources of money. By
the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Washington Times was the daily billboard
where conservatives placed their messages to each other and to the outside
world.
In
1991, when conservative commentator Wesley Pruden was named the new editor of
the Washington Times, President George H.W. Bush invited Pruden to a private
White House lunch. The purpose, Bush explained, was “just to tell you how
valuable the Times has become in Washington, where we read it every day.”
[Washington Times, May 17, 1992]
Government
documents also showed that the Reagan-Bush team was shielding Moon’s operation
from investigations at the same time Moon’s newspaper was doing the same for
the administration.
According
to Justice Department documents released under the Freedom of Information Act,
federal authorities were rebuffing hundreds of requests – many from common
citizens – for examination of Moon’s foreign ties and money sources.
Typical
of the responses was a May 18, 1989, letter from Assistant Attorney General
Carol T. Crawford rejecting the possibility that Moon’s organization be
required to divulge its foreign-funded propaganda under the Foreign Agent
Registration Act (FARA).
“With
respect to FARA, the Department is faced with First Amendment considerations
involving the free exercise of religion,” Crawford said. “As you know, the
First Amendment’s protection of religious freedom is not limited to the
traditional, well-established religions.”
A 1992 PBS documentary about Moon’s political empire and its free-spending
habits started another flurry of citizen demands for an investigation,
according to the Justice Department files.
One
letter from a private citizen to the Justice Department stated, “I write in
consternation and disgust at the apparent support, or at least the sheltering,
of the Reverend Sun Myung Moon, a foreign agent ... who has subverted the
American political system for the past 20 years. ... Did Reagan and/or Bush
receive financial support from Moon or his agents during any of their election
campaigns in violation of federal law?”
Another letter complained that “apparently Moon gave the Bush and Reagan
campaigns millions of dollars in support and helped fund the [Nicaraguan] contras
as well as sponsoring rallys [sic] in 50 states to support the Persian Gulf
war. No wonder the Justice Department turns a blind eye?”
“I feel it is necessary to find out who is financing the operation and why
other countries are trying to direct the policies of the United States,” wrote
another citizen. “If even one-half of the allegations are true, Moon and his
assistants belong in jail rather than being welcomed and supported at the
highest level of Washington.”
As
public demands mounted for Moon and his front groups to register as foreign
agents, the Justice Department added a new argument to its reasons to say no.
In an Aug. 19, 1992, letter, Assistant Attorney General Robert S. Mueller
dismissed a suggestion that the Moon-backed American Freedom Council should
register under FARA because Moon, a South Korean citizen, had obtained U.S.
resident-alien status – or a “green card.”
Mueller,
who is now FBI director, wrote that “in the absence of a foreign principal,
there is no requirement for registration. … The Reverend Sun Myung Moon enjoys
the status of permanent resident alien in the United States and therefore does
not fall within FARA’s definition of foreign principal. It follows that the Act
is not applicable to the [American Freedom] Council because of its association
with Reverend Moon.”
Ironically, Mueller, who went out of his way to find reasons not to investigate
Moon, touts in his official FBI biography his background investigating and
prosecuting “major financial fraud, terrorist and public corruption cases, as
well as narcotics conspiracies and international money launderers.”
Hidden Money
Some
prominent figures on the American Right went to great lengths to conceal their
financial connections to Moon, making sure his assistance passed through
several hands before it got to their pockets.
For
instance, on Jan. 28, 1995, a beaming Rev. Jerry Falwell told his Old Time
Gospel Hour congregation news that seemed heaven sent. The rotund televangelist
hailed two Virginia businessmen as financial saviors of debt-ridden Liberty
University, the fundamentalist Christian school that Falwell had made the crown
jewel of his Religious Right empire.
“They had to borrow money, hock their houses, hock everything,” said Falwell.
“Thank God for friends like Dan Reber and Jimmy Thomas.” Falwell’s congregation
rose as one to applaud. The star of the moment was Daniel Reber, who was
standing behind Falwell.
Reber and Thomas earned Falwell’s public gratitude by excusing the Lynchburg,
Virginia, school of about one-half of its $73 million debt. In the late 1980s,
that flood of red ink had forced Falwell to abandon his Moral Majority
political organization and the debt nearly drowned Liberty University in
bankruptcy.
Reber
and Thomas came to Falwell’s rescue in the nick of time. Their non-profit
Christian Heritage Foundation of Forest, Virginia, snapped up a big chunk of
Liberty’s debt for $2.5 million, a fraction of its face value. Thousands of
small religious investors who had bought church construction bonds through a
Texas company were the big losers.
But
Falwell was joyous. He told local reporters that the moment was “the greatest
single day of financial advantage” in the school’s history.
Left
unmentioned in the happy sermon was the identity of the bigger guardian angel
who had appeared at the propitious moment to protect Falwell’s financial
interests. Falwell’s secret benefactor was Sun Myung Moon, the self-proclaimed
South Korean messiah who is controversial with many fundamentalist Christians because
of his strange Biblical interpretations and his alleged brainwashing of
thousands of young Americans, often shattering their bonds with their
biological families.
Covertly,
Moon had helped bail out Liberty University through one of his front groups which
funneled $3.5 million to the Reber-Thomas Christian Heritage Foundation, the
non-profit that had purchased the school’s debt.
I
discovered this Moon-Falwell connection while looking for something else: how
much Moon’s Women’s Federation for World Peace had paid former President George
H.W. Bush for a series of speeches in Asia in 1995. I obtained the federation’s
Internal Revenue Service records but discovered that Bush’s undisclosed
speaking fee was buried in a line item of $13.6 million for conference
expenses.
There was, however, another listing for a $3.5 million “educational” grant to
the Christian Heritage Foundation. A call to the Virginia corporate records
office confirmed that the foundation was the one run by Reber and Thomas.
In
a subsequent interview, the Women Federation’s vice president Susan Fefferman
confirmed that the $3.5 million grant had gone to “Mr. Falwell’s people” for
the benefit of Liberty University. “It was Dan Reber,” she said. But she could
not recall much else about the grant, even though it was by far the largest
single grant awarded by the federation that year.
For details on the grant, Fefferman referred me to Keith Cooperrider, the
federation’s treasurer. Cooperrider was also the chief financial officer of
Moon’s Washington Times and a longtime Unification Church functionary.
Cooperrider did not return calls seeking comment. Falwell and Reber also failed
to respond to my calls, though Falwell later defended his acceptance of the
money by saying it had no influence on his ministry.
“If
the American Atheists Society or Saddam Hussein himself ever sent an
unrestricted gift to any of my ministries,” Falwell said, “be assured I will
operate on Billy Sunday’s philosophy: The Devil’s had it long enough, and
quickly cash the check.” [See “Moon-Related Funds Filter to Evangelicals,”
Christianity Today, posted on Web, Feb. 9, 1998]
But
the public record also reveals that Falwell solicited Moon’s help in bailing
out Liberty University. In a lawsuit filed in the Circuit Court of Bedford
County – a community in southwestern Virginia – two of Reber’s former business
associates alleged that Reber and Falwell flew to South Korea on Jan. 9, 1994,
on a seven-day “secret trip” to meet “with representatives of the Unification
Church.”
The
court document states that Reber and Falwell were accompanied to South Korea by
Ronald S. Godwin, who had been executive director of Falwell’s Moral Majority
before signing on as vice president of Moon’s Washington Times.
According to Bedford County court records, Reber, Falwell and Godwin also had
discussions at Liberty University in 1993 with Dong Moon Joo, one of Moon’s
right-hand men and president of the Washington Times.
Though
Reber was queried about the purposes of the Moon-connected meetings in the court
papers, he settled the business dispute before responding to interrogatories or
submitting to a deposition. He denied any legal wrongdoing.
Anti-American Tirades
By
the mid-1990s, Sun Myung Moon represented a potential embarrassment to the
American Right because Moon had grown harshly anti-American after his political
ally, George H.W. Bush, was ousted from office.
The
conservatives were lucky that few American news outlets were interested in the
increasingly bizarre utterances from the South Korean benefactor of U.S.
conservative causes.
In
earlier years, though privately disdaining America’s concept of individual
liberty, Moon publicly stressed his love for the United States. On Sept. 18,
1976, for instance, Moon staged a red-white-and-blue flag-draped rally at the
Washington Monument, declaring that “I not only respect America, but truly love
this nation.”
Even years later, Unification Church recruiters would show that video to young
Americans. One recruit, college freshman John Stacey, was impressed with the
patriotic images after he was shown the video by the Moon front, Collegiate
Association for Research of Principles (CARP).
“American
flags were everywhere,” recalled Stacey, a thin young man from central New
Jersey. “The first video they showed me was Reverend Moon praising America and
praising Christianity.” In 1992, Stacey considered himself a patriotic American
and a faithful Christian.
Stacey
soon joined the Unification Church and rose to become a Pacific Northwest
leader in CARP. “They liked to hang me up because I’m young and I’m American,”
Stacey told me. “It’s a good image for the church. They try to create the
all-American look.”
But
Stacey gradually discovered a different reality. At a 1995 leadership
conference at a church compound in Anchorage, Alaska, Stacey met face-to-face
with Moon who was sitting on a throne-like chair while a group of American
followers, many middle-aged converts from the 1970s, sat at his feet like
children.
“Reverend
Moon looked at me straight in the eye and said, ‘America is Satanic. America is
so Satanic that even hamburgers should be considered evil, because they come
from America,’” Stacey said. “Hamburgers! My father was a butcher, so that
bothered me. ... I started feeling that I was betraying my country.”
Moon’s
criticism of Jesus also unsettled Stacey. “In the church, it’s very
anti-Jesus,” Stacey said. “Jesus failed miserably. He died a lonely death.
Reverend Moon is the hero that comes and saves pathetic Jesus. Reverend Moon is
better than God. ... That’s why I left the Moonies. Because it started to feel
like idolatry. He’s promoting idolatry.”
After
years in the sunlight of acceptance from the Reagan-Bush administrations,
Moon’s entered years of eclipse as his influence faded during the Clinton administration.
His animosity toward the United States grew.
“America has become the kingdom of individualism, and its people are
individualists,” Moon preached in Tarrytown, N.Y., on March 5, 1995. “You must
realize that America has become the kingdom of Satan.”
In
a speech to his followers on Aug. 4, 1996, Moon vowed that the church’s
eventual dominance over the United States would be followed by the liquidation
of American individualism and the establishment of Moon’s theocratic rule.
“Americans
who continue to maintain their privacy and extreme individualism are foolish
people,” Moon declared. “The world will reject Americans who continue to be so
foolish. Once you have this great power of love, which is big enough to swallow
entire America, there may be some individuals who complain inside your stomach.
However, they will be digested.”
During the same sermon, Moon decried assertive American women.
“American women have the tendency to consider that women are in the subject
position,” he said. “However, woman’s shape is like that of a receptacle. The
concave shape is a receiving shape. Whereas, the convex shape symbolizes
giving. ... Since man contains the seed of life, he should plant it in the
deepest place. Does woman contain the seed of life? Absolutely not. Then if you
desire to receive the seed of life, you have to become an absolute object. In
order to qualify as an absolute object, you need to demonstrate absolute faith,
love and obedience to your subject. Absolute obedience means that you have to
negate yourself 100 percent.”
Though
Moon had downplayed his provocative sexual beliefs since coming to America,
sometimes the old themes popped up. After Moon spoke in Minneapolis on Oct. 26,
1996, a reporter for the
Unification
News, an internal newsletter, commented that “what the audience
heard was not the usual things that one would expect to hear from a minister.
Reverend Moon’s talk included a very frank discussion of the purpose, role and
true value of the sexual organs.” [See
Unification
News, December 1996]
On
May 1, 1997, Moon told a group of followers that “the country that represents
Satan’s harvest is America.” Moon also declared that “Satan created this kind
of Hell on Earth,” the United States. He again denounced American women as
having “inherited the line of prostitutes. … American women are even worse
because they practice free sex just because they enjoy it.”
Lashing out at the United States again, Moon decried American tolerance of
homosexuals, whom he likened to “dirty dung-eating dogs.” For Americans who
“truly love such dogs,” Moon said, “they also become like dung-eating dogs and
produce that quality of life.” [Washington Post, Nov. 23-24, 1997]
Bush to the Rescue
In
fall 1996, another of Sun Myung Moon’s forays into the high-priced world of
media and politics was in trouble. South American journalists were writing
scathingly about his plan to open a regional newspaper that Moon hoped would
give him the same influence in Latin America that the Washington Times had in
the United States.
As
publication day ticked closer for Moon’s
Tiempos
del Mundo, leading South American newspapers recounted unsavory
chapters of Moon’s history, including his links with South Korea’s fearsome
intelligence service and with violent anticommunist organizations that bordered
on neo-fascist.
Moon’s
disciples fumed about the critical stories and accused the Argentine news media
of trying to sabotage Moon’s plans for an inaugural gala in Buenos Aires on
Nov. 23, 1996. “The local press was trying to undermine the event,” complained
the church’s internal newsletter,
Unification
News.
Given the controversy, Argentina’s president, Carlos Menem, rejected Moon’s
invitation. But Moon had a trump card to play in his bid for South American
respectability: the endorsement of an ex-President of the United States, George
H.W. Bush.
Agreeing
to speak at the newspaper’s launch, Bush flew aboard a private plane, arriving
in Buenos Aires on Nov. 22. Bush stayed at Menem’s official residence, the
Olivos, though Bush’s presence didn’t change Menem’s mind about attending the
gala.
Still,
as the biggest VIP at the inaugural gala, Bush saved the day, Moon’s followers
gushed. “Mr. Bush’s presence as keynote speaker gave the event invaluable prestige,”
wrote the
Unification News.
“Father [Moon] and Mother [Mrs. Moon] sat with several of the True Children
[Moon’s offspring] just a few feet from the podium” where Bush spoke before
about 900 of Moon’s guests at the Sheraton Hotel.
“I
want to salute Reverend Moon, who is the founder of the Washington Times and
also of
Tiempos del Mundo,”
Bush declared. “A lot of my friends in South America don’t know about the
Washington Times, but it is an independent voice. The editors of the Washington
Times tell me that never once has the man with the vision interfered with the
running of the paper, a paper that in my view brings sanity to Washington, D.C.
I am convinced that
Tiempos
del Mundo is going to do the same thing” in Latin America.
Bush’s speech was so effusive that it surprised even Moon’s followers. “Once
again, heaven turned a disappointment into a victory,” the
Unification News
exulted. “Everyone was delighted to hear his compliments. We knew he would give
an appropriate and ‘nice’ speech, but praise in Father’s presence was more than
we expected. ... It was vindication. We could just hear a sigh of relief from
Heaven.”
While Bush’s assertion about Moon’s newspaper as a voice of “sanity” may be a
matter of opinion, Bush’s vouching for the Washington Times’ editorial
independence simply wasn’t true.
Almost
since it opened in 1982, a string of senior editors and correspondents have
resigned, citing the manipulation of the news by Moon and his subordinates. The
first editor, James Whelan, resigned in 1984, confessing that “I have blood on
my hands” for helping Moon’s church achieve greater legitimacy.
But
Bush’s boosterism was just what Moon needed in South America. “The day after,”
the
Unification News
observed, “the press did a 180-degree about-turn once they realized that the
event had the support of a U.S. President.” With Bush’s help, Moon had gained
another beachhead for his worldwide business-religious-political-media empire.
After the event, Menem told reporters from
La
Nacion that Bush had claimed privately to be only a mercenary who
did not really know Moon. “Bush told me he came and charged money to do it,”
Menem said. [La Nacion, Nov. 26, 1996].
But
Bush was not telling Menem the whole story. By fall 1996, Bush and Moon had
been working in political tandem for at least a decade and a half. The
ex-President also had been earning huge speaking fees as a front man for Moon
for more than a year.
In September 1995, Bush and his wife, Barbara, gave six speeches in Asia for
the Women’s Federation for World Peace, a group led by Moon’s wife, Hak Ja Han
Moon. In one speech on Sept. 14 to 50,000 Moon supporters in Tokyo, Bush
insisted that “what really counts is faith, family and friends.”
Mrs.
Moon followed the ex-President to the podium and announced that “it has to be
Reverend Moon to save the United States, which is in decline because of the
destruction of the family and moral decay.”[Washington Post, Sept. 15, 1995]
In summer 1996, Bush was lending his prestige to Moon again. Bush addressed the
Moon-connected Family Federation for World Peace in Washington, an event that
gained notoriety when comedian Bill Cosby tried to back out of his contract
after learning of Moon’s connection. Bush had no such qualms. [Washington Post,
July 30, 1996]
Throughout these public appearances for Moon, Bush’s office refused to divulge
how much Moon-affiliated organizations have paid the ex-President. But
estimates of Bush’s fee for the Buenos Aires appearance alone ran between
$100,000 and $500,000. Sources close to the Unification Church have put the
total Bush-Moon package in the millions, with one source telling me that Bush
stood to make as much as $10 million total from Moon’s organization.
The senior George Bush may have had a political motive as well. By 1996,
sources close to Bush were saying the ex-President was working hard to enlist
well-to-do conservatives and their money behind the presidential candidacy of
his son, George W. Bush. Moon was one of the deepest pockets in right-wing
circles.
Fishing for Influence
In
a sermon on Jan. 2, 1996, Moon was unusually blunt about how he expected the
church’s wealth to buy influence among the powerful in South America, just as
it did in Washington.
“Father
has been practicing the philosophy of fishing here,” Moon said, through an
interpreter who spoke of Moon in the third person. “He [Moon] gave the bait to
Uruguay and then the bigger fish of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay kept their
mouths open, waiting for a bigger bait silently. The bigger the fish, the bigger
the mouth. Therefore, Father is able to hook them more easily.”
As part of his business strategy, Moon explained that he would dot the
continent with small airstrips and construct bases for submarines which could
evade Coast Guard patrols. His airfield project would allow tourists to visit
“hidden, untouched, small places” throughout South America, he said.
“Therefore,
they need small airplanes and small landing strips in the remote countryside,”
Moon said. “In the near future, we will have many small airports throughout the
world.” Moon wanted the submarines because “there are so many restrictions due
to national boundaries worldwide. If you have a submarine, you don’t have to be
bound in that way.”
(As strange as Moon’s submarine project might sound, a cable from the U.S.
Embassy in Japan, dated Feb. 18, 1994, cited press reports that a
Moon-connected Japanese company, Toen Shoji, had bought 40 Russian submarines.
The subs were supposedly bound for North Korea where they were to be dismantled
and melted down as scrap.)
Moon also recognized the importance of media in protecting his curious
operations, which sounded a lot like an invitation to drug traffickers.
He
boasted to his followers that with his vast array of political and media
assets, he will dominate the new Information Age. “That is why Father has been
combining and organizing scholars from all over the world, and also newspaper
organizations – in order to make propaganda,” Moon said.
With
his background and prominence, Moon and his organization would seem a natural
attraction for U.S. government scrutiny. But Moon may have purchased insurance
against any intrusive investigation by buying so many powerful American
politicians that Washington’s power centers can no more afford the scrutiny than
he can.
In
the 1990s, Moon remembered to keep up some of his important friendships in the
United States. In 1997, his Washington Times Foundation made a $1 million-plus
donation to George H.W. Bush’s presidential library in Texas. [Washington Post,
Nov. 24, 1997]
Moon
got a pass even when there was first-hand evidence of his money-laundering.
In
Nansook Moon’s 1998 memoirs,
In
the Shadow of the Moons, Moon’s ex-daughter-in-law – writing under
her maiden name Nansook Hong – alleged that Moon’s organization had engaged in
a long-running conspiracy to smuggle cash into the United States and to deceive
U.S. Customs agents.
“The
Unification Church was a cash operation,” Nansook Hong wrote. “I watched
Japanese church leaders arrive at regular intervals at East Garden [the Moon
compound north of New York City] with paper bags full of money, which the
Reverend Moon would either pocket or distribute to the heads of various
church-owned business enterprises at his breakfast table.
“The
Japanese had no trouble bringing the cash into the United States; they would
tell customs agents that they were in America to gamble at Atlantic City. In
addition, many businesses run by the church were cash operations, including
several Japanese restaurants in New York City. I saw deliveries of cash from
church headquarters that went directly into the wall safe in Mrs. Moon’s
closet.”
Mrs.
Moon pressed her daughter-in-law into one cash-smuggling incident after a trip
to Japan in 1992, Nansook Hong wrote.
Mrs.
Moon had received “stacks of money” and divvied it up among her entourage for
the return trip through Seattle, Nansook Hong wrote. “I was given $20,000 in
two packs of crisp new bills,” she recalled. “I hid them beneath the tray in my
makeup case. ... I knew that smuggling was illegal, but I believed the
followers of Sun Myung Moon answered to higher laws.”
U.S.
currency laws require that cash amounts above $10,000 be declared at Customs
when the money enters or leaves the country. It is also illegal to conspire
with couriers to bring in lesser amounts when the total exceeds the $10,000
figure.
In
the Shadow of the Moons
raised anew the question of whether Moon’s money
laundering – from mysterious sources in both Asia and South America – has made
him a conduit for illicit foreign money influencing the U.S. government and
American politics.
Moon’s
spokesmen have denied that he launders drug money or moves money from other
criminal enterprises. They attribute his wealth to donations and business
profits, but have refused to open Moon’s records for public inspection.
Still,
Nansook Hong’s first-hand allegations and other allegations of money-laundering
in Uruguay might reasonably have prompted more questions in the United States
about how Moon could continue lavishing billions of dollars on U.S.
conservative publications and causes.
But
those follow-up questions were never asked. Moon apparently had hooked too many
large-mouthed fish in the United States.
Moon’s
successful fishing in political/media waters also seems to have protected him
and his anti-Americanism from the kind of ugly public attention that has
inundated Jeremiah Wright.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008