The Dark Side of Rev. Sun Myung Moon
Part 15, Kerry Attacker Protected Rev. Moon
By Robert Parry
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/sunmyongmoon15part15oct04.shtml
October 15, 2004
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2004/101504.html
Carlton Sherwood, who has produced an anti-John Kerry video
that will be aired across the United States before the Nov. 2 elections,
wrote a book in the 1980s denouncing federal investigators who tried to
crack down on Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s illicit financial operations.
In retrospect, Sherwood’s book, Inquisition: The
Prosecution and Persecution of the Reverend Sun Myung Moon, appears
to have been part of a right-wing counter-offensive aimed at discouraging
scrutiny of Moon and his mysterious money flows. The strategy largely succeeded,
enabling Moon to continue funneling hundreds of millions of dollars into
the U.S. political process, most notably to publish the ultra-conservative
Washington Times but also to make payments to prominent politicians, including
former President George H.W. Bush.
New evidence also makes clear that Moon resumed his practice
of laundering money into the United States after serving a 13-month prison
sentence for a 1982 conviction for tax law violations. Former Moon associates,
including his ex-daughter-in-law, have disclosed that Moon’s organization
smuggled cash across U.S. borders, but those admissions have not led to
renewed federal investigations. [For details, see Robert Parry, Secrecy
& Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq.]
Indeed, the pummeling of federal investigators who examined
Moon’s financial schemes in the 1970s and early 1980s – and
Moon’s enormous clout among conservatives in Washington – have
made the South Korean theocrat something of a political untouchable. The
congressional investigators, who first uncovered Moon’s financial
irregularities, and the federal prosecutor, who narrowed that evidence into
a successful prosecution for tax evasion, were made into cautionary tales
for others thinking about challenging Moon.
Accused Investigators
Government investigators, including former Rep. Donald Fraser and
ex-federal prosecutor Martin Flumenbaum, were accused by Moon defenders
of offenses ranging from a lack of patriotism to racial and religious bigotry.
Sherwood, a former Washington Times reporter, was among the Moon defenders
who lashed out at Fraser and Flumenbaum, portraying them as unscrupulous
witch hunters who abused their investigative authority.
In Inquisition, Sherwood claimed he had examined the financial
records of Moon’s organization and found nothing improper, concluding
that Moon and his associates “were and continued to be the victims
of the worst kind of religious prejudice and racial bigotry this country
has witnessed in over a century.” Sherwood portrayed Moon as a religious
martyr.
But there was a back story to Sherwood’s book. Inquisition
was originally put out by a little-known publisher called Andromeda, which
apparently operated out of the house of Roger Fontaine, a former member
of Ronald Reagan’s National Security Council staff who later worked
as a reporter for Moon’s Washington Times. In 1991, the book was republished
by Regnery-Gateway, which was run by conservative operative Alfred Regnery,
who worked in Ronald Reagan’s Justice Department.
Beyond the conservative allegiances of Sherwood’s backers,
there also was evidence that Moon himself subsidized the book. A PBS Frontline
documentary in 1992 reported that former Washington Times editor James Whelan
said Sherwood told Regnery that Moon’s organization would buy 100,000
copies of Inquisition, which would assure Regnery a handsome profit. Frontline
reported that Regnery denied Whelan’s statement, as has Sherwood.
However, a week after interviewing Regnery, Frontline said
it obtained a copy of a letter that corroborated claims of a secret Moon
role in the production of Sherwood’s book. The letter, addressed to
Moon from his aide James Gavin, stated that Gavin had reviewed the “overall
tone and factual contents” of Inquisition before publication and had
suggested revisions.
“Mr. Sherwood has assured me that all this will be done
when the manuscript is sent to the publisher,” Gavin wrote. “When
all of our suggestions have been incorporated, the book will be complete
and in my opinion will make a significant impact. … In addition to
silencing our critics now, the book should be invaluable in persuading others
of our legitimacy for many years to come.” Frontline said Gavin refused
to be interviewed about the letter.
Sherwood’s book did contribute to a successful campaign
that silenced many of Moon’s critics. The self-proclaimed Messiah
helped his cause, too, by becoming a major benefactor to the U.S. conservative
movement, sponsoring lavish conferences as well as financing right-wing
media outlets.
Koreagate
The Right’s "defend Moon campaign" dated back to
the late 1970s when an investigation by a House subcommittee headed by Rep.
Fraser, a Minnesota Democrat, discovered that Moon had participated in the
“Koreagate” influence-buying scheme. In that operation, the
South Korean intelligence agency was caught secretly trying to manipulate
U.S. policy and politics by spreading money around Washington. One of South
Korea’s conduits was Moon, then best known as a religious cult leader
who presided over mass weddings of his followers and was accused of “brainwashing”
young recruits.
Fraser’s investigators found that Moon’s organization
was funneling large sums of money into the United States from Japan, but
the investigators couldn’t trace the money all the way back to its
source.
Moon, who was already investing in Washington’s conservative
political infrastructure, turned to American right-wing operatives for help.
In pro-Moon publications, Fraser and his staff were pilloried as leftists.
Anti-Moon witnesses were assailed as unstable liars. Minor bookkeeping problems
inside Fraser’s investigation, such as Fraser's salary advances to
some staff members, prompted letters demanding 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). At the time, Dolan's group was pioneering the strategy
of "independent" TV attack ads. In turn, Moon's CAUSA International
helped Dolan by contributing $500,000 to another 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 questions about his patriotism, Fraser
lost a Senate bid in 1978 and left Congress.
Another early Moon defender was Grover Norquist, who interrupted
a 1983 press conference by the moderate Republican Ripon Society as it was
warning that the New Right had entered into “an alliance of expediency”
with Moon’s organization. Ripon’s chairman, Rep. Jim Leach of
Iowa, had 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.” Then-college GOP leader Norquist disrupted Ripon’s
news conference with accusations that Leach was lying. (Norquist is now
a prominent conservative leader in Washington with close ties to the highest
levels of George W. Bush’s administration.)
Over the next two decades, despite Moon’s controversial
goals that include replacing democracy and individuality with his own personal
theocratic rule, Moon lured into his circle prominent political figures.
One of those leaders was George H.W. Bush, who accepted hundreds of thousands
of dollars from Moon’s organization for giving speeches.
Crime Connections
Another concern about Moon was his longstanding ties to organized
crime figures in Asia and South America, including Japanese rightists Ryoichi
Sasakawa and Yoshio Kodama, reputed leaders of the yakuza organized-crime
syndicate that profited off drug smuggling, gambling and prostitution in
Japan and Korea.
Though briefly jailed as war criminals after World War II,
Sasakawa and Kodama rebounded to become power-brokers in Japan's ruling
Liberal Democratic Party. They also collaborated with Moon in organizing
far-right anti-communist organizations, such as the World Anti-Communist
League (WACL). According to David E. Kaplan and Alec Dubro in their book,
Yakuza, "Sasakawa became an advisor to Reverend Sun Myung Moon's Japanese
branch of the Unification Church" and helped recruit many of its original
members.
Moon also associated with right-wing South American leaders
implicated in cocaine trafficking. In 1980, Moon’s organization made
friends with Bolivia’s “Cocaine Coup” conspirators who
had overthrown a left-of-center government and seized dictatorial power.
The violent coup installed drug-tainted military officers at the head of
Bolivia’s government, giving the putsch the nickname the “Cocaine
Coup.”
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, Gen.
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,
another of Moon’s anti-communist organizations, listed as members
nearly all the leading Bolivian coup-makers.
By late 1981, however, 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,” reported
German journalist Kai Hermann. [An English translation of Hermann’s
report on the Moon organization’s role in the Cocaine Coup was published
in Covert Action Information Bulletin, Winter 1986]
The Cocaine Coup leaders soon found themselves on the run,
too. Interior Minister Luis Arce-Gomez was eventually extradited to Miami
and was sentenced to 30 years in prison for drug trafficking. Drug lord
Roberto Suarez, who was Arce-Gomez’s cousin and had helped finance
the coup, got a 15-year prison term. Gen. Garcia Meza became a fugitive
from a 30-year sentence imposed on him in Bolivia for abuse of power, corruption
and murder.
But Moon’s organization suffered few negative repercussions
from its coziness with the Cocaine Coup plotters. By the early 1980s, flush
with seemingly unlimited funds, Moon had moved on to promoting himself with
the new Republican administration in Washington. There, Moon made his organization
useful to President Reagan, Vice President Bush and other leading Republicans.
[For more on Moon and the Cocaine Coup, see Parry’s Secrecy &
Privilege.]
Contra Cocaine
Moon cemented his relationship with the U.S. conservative movement
by creating the Washington Times in 1982 and making it a reliable propaganda
organ for the Republican Party. Moon’s newspaper also promoted conservative
causes dear to Ronald Reagan’s heart, such as the contra rebels who
were fighting to overthrow Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinista government.
In the 1980s, Moon’s organization and the Reagan-Bush administration
found common cause, too, in covering up evidence of contra-connected drug
smuggling.
Ironically, in 1986, the leading U.S. senator who challenged
the contra cocaine cover-up was John Kerry. Soon, the freshman senator from
Massachusetts found himself under attack from Moon’s Washington Times.
The newspaper published articles depicting Kerry’s contra drug probe
as a wasteful political witch hunt. “Kerry’s anti-contra efforts
extensive, expensive, in vain,” announced the headline of one Times
article. [Washington Times, Aug. 13, 1986]
But when the evidence continued to build, the Washington Times
shifted tactics. In 1987 in front-page articles, it began accusing Kerry’s
staff of obstructing justice because their investigation supposedly interfered
with Reagan-Bush administration efforts to get at the truth. “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,” according to one of the articles. [Washington Times, Jan. 21,
1987]
Despite the newspaper’s attacks and pressure from the
Reagan-Bush administration, Kerry’s contra-drug investigation eventually
concluded that 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
said 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.”
In the late 1980s, Kerry’s dramatic findings weren’t
taken seriously by the New York Times, the Washington Post and other major
news media. The Reagan-Bush attacks on Kerry as an irresponsible investigator
had stuck. In a Conventional Wisdom Watch item, Newsweek summed up this
dominant view, calling Kerry a “randy conspiracy buff.”
It took another decade for the inspectors general of the CIA
and the Justice Department to conduct their own investigations that corroborated
Kerry’s findings of both contra trafficking and Reagan-Bush neglect
of the evidence. In a two-volume report issued in 1998, CIA inspector general
Frederick Hitz disclosed that more than 50 contras and contra-related entities
had become involved in the cocaine trade during the 1980s and that incriminating
information – which was known to the Reagan-Bush administration –
was withheld from Congress.
Hitz said the chief reason for the CIA’s protective
handling of the contra drug information was Langley’s “one overriding
priority: to oust the Sandinista government. … [CIA officers] were
determined that the various difficulties they encountered not be allowed
to prevent effective implementation of the contra program.” [For details,
see Robert Parry's Lost History.]
Moon’s Washington Times also had played an important
role in the cover-up of the contra cocaine trafficking, although the motives
of Moon’s organization – including its longstanding relationship
with drug-tainted leaders in South America – may have added extra
incentives to frustrate Kerry’s investigation.
More Kerry Bashing
Now, nearly two decades after Kerry’s contra cocaine investigation,
Moon’s organization is trying to keep its old adversary out of the
White House and away from control of the Justice Department.
On a number of topics, the Washington Times has led the way
in battering Kerry. For instance, as Kerry emerged as the Democratic frontrunner
this year, the newspaper promoted an investigative report questioning whether
Kerry was lying when he said some foreign leaders favored him over George
W. Bush. [Washington Times, March 12, 2004] Though clearly many foreign
leaders did favor a change in the White House, the Times opened up a line
of attack against Kerry’s honesty and internationalism that has continued
to this day. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Bush and the L-Word.”]
Also popping up again is Carlton Sherwood, who has produced
a video that virtually calls Kerry a traitor for his anti-Vietnam War activities.
The video, “Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal,” will be broadcast
before the Nov. 2 election on Sinclair Broadcast Group’s 62 stations,
the largest chain of television stations in the United States.
The Sinclair chain is headed by David Smith and his three
brothers whose collection of TV stations have promoted right-wing causes
before, even barring its ABC affiliates from airing Nightline on April 30
when Ted Koppel paid tribute to U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq by reading
their names and showing their photographs. Sinclair's thinking apparently
was that listing the names of the dead would undermine the war effort.
“The Smith brothers and their executives have made 97
percent of their political donations during the 2004 election cycle to Bush
and the Republicans,” according to Washington Post reporters Howard
Kurtz and Frank Ahrens. [Washington Post, Oct. 12, 2004]
Democratic leaders have cited these Republican political ties
in complaining that the Sinclair chain is simply broadcasting “Stolen
Honor” as anti-Kerry propaganda to benefit the Bush campaign.
But Sherwood’s longstanding ties to Moon’s organization
raise other troubling questions: Do inside-the-Beltway conservatives have
a financial incentive to make sure a Moon-friendly politician like Bush
stays in charge of the Executive Branch? Would a Kerry victory potentially
mean more trouble for Moon getting his mysterious money into the United
States?
Robert Parry is a veteran investigative reporter, who broke
many of the Iran-contra stories in the 1980s for The Associated Press and
Newsweek. Robert Parry's latest book is Secrecy & Privilege: Rise
of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq. It can be purchased at
http://www.secrecyandprivilege.com.
It's also available at
Amazon.com.
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