Dark Side of Rev. Moon: Buying the Right, by Robert Parry

The impulse to believe the absurd when presented with the unknowable is called religion. Whether this is wise or unwise is the domain of doctrine. Once you understand someone's doctrine, you understand their rationale for believing the absurd. At that point, it may no longer seem absurd. You can get to both sides of this conondrum from here.

Re: Dark Side of Rev. Moon: Buying the Right, by Robert Parr

Postby admin » Tue Jan 23, 2018 3:31 am

The Moon-Bush Cash Conduit
by Robert Parry
June 14, 2006

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Over the past quarter century, South Korean theocrat Sun Myung Moon has been one of the Bush family’s major benefactors – both politically and financially – while enjoying what appears to be protection against federal investigations into evidence that his cult-like organization has functioned as a criminal enterprise.

Indeed, the newest disclosure about Moon funneling money to a Bush family entity bears many of the earmarks of Moon’s business strategy of laundering money through a complex maze of front companies and cut-outs so it can’t be easily followed. In this case, according to an article in the Houston Chronicle, Moon’s Washington Times Foundation gave $1 million to the Greater Houston Community Foundation, which in turn acted as a conduit for donations to the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library.

The Chronicle obtained indirect confirmation that Moon’s money was passing through the Houston foundation to the Bush library from Bush family spokesman Jim McGrath. Asked whether Moon’s $1 million had ended up there, McGrath responded, “We’re in an uncomfortable position. … If a donor doesn’t want to be identified we need to honor their privacy.”

But when asked whether the $1 million was intended to curry favor with the Bush family to get President George W. Bush to grant a pardon for Moon’s 1982 felony tax fraud conviction, McGrath answered, “If that’s why he gave the grant, he’s throwing his money away. … That’s not the way the Bushes operate.”

McGrath then added, “President Bush has been very grateful for the friendship shown to him by the Washington Times Foundation, and the Washington Times serves a vital role in Washington. But there can’t be any connection to any kind of a pardon.” [Houston Chronicle, June 8, 2006, citing the work of private researcher Larry Zilliox.]

But Moon has many other interests beyond clearing his criminal record with a presidential pardon.

While it’s true Moon has sought a pardon since the latter years of Ronald Reagan’s administration, Moon also has counted on powerful political connections to shield his business activities from renewed federal investigation that otherwise might have pried into criminal offenses ranging from money laundering to evading the U.S. embargo on the rogue state of North Korea.

Moon has achieved this remarkable insulation for his operations largely by spreading around hundreds of millions of dollars for political activities, charitable functions and the publication of one of Washington’s daily newspapers, the Washington Times.

The founder of the South Korean-based Unification Church has made himself particularly useful to the Bush family and other prominent Republicans who have returned the favor by speaking at his events, lavishing praise on his business operations and granting him Capitol Hill space for some of his ceremonies.

Bags of Cash

Faced with Moon’s political clout, federal authorities have looked the other way for more than two decades even when principals within Moon’s organization have made public declarations about its continuing criminal practices.


For instance, Moon’s former daughter-in-law, Nansook Hong, admitted to participating in money-laundering schemes by personally smuggling cash from South Korea into the United States. She also said she witnessed other cases in which bags of cash were carried into the United States and delivered to Moon’s businesses.

Moon “demonstrated contempt for U.S. law every time he accepted a paper bag full of untraceable, undeclared cash collected from true believers” who smuggled the money in from overseas, Nansook Hong wrote in her 1998 book, In the Shadows of the Moons.

Nansook Hong’s allegations were corroborated by other disaffected Moon disciples in press interviews and in civil court proceedings.

Maria Madelene Pretorious, a former Unification Church member who worked at Moon’s Manhattan Center, a New York City music venue and recording studio, testified at a court hearing in Massachusetts that in December of 1993 or January of 1994, one of Moon’s sons, Hyo Jin Moon, returned from a trip to Korea “with $600,000 in cash which he had received from his father. ... Myself along with three or four other members that worked at Manhattan Center saw the cash in bags, shopping bags.”

In an interview with me in the mid-1990s, Pretorious said Asian church members would bring cash into the United States where it would be circulated through Moon’s business empire as a way to launder it. At the center of this financial operation, Pretorious said, was One-Up Corp., a Delaware-registered holding company that owned many Moon enterprises including the Manhattan Center and New World Communications, the parent company of the Washington Times.

“Once that cash is at the Manhattan Center, it has to be accounted for,” Pretorious said. “The way that’s done is to launder the cash. Manhattan Center gives cash to a business called Happy World which owns restaurants. ... Happy World needs to pay illegal aliens. ... Happy World pays some back to the Manhattan Center for ‘services rendered.’ The rest goes to One-Up and then comes back to Manhattan Center as an investment.”

The lack of federal investigative interest in these admissions of guilt was especially curious because evidence of Moon’s money-laundering dated back to the late 1970s when Moon’s operations came under the scrutiny of a congressional probe into a South Korean influence-buying plot called “Koreagate.” Investigators discovered Moon’s pattern of money transfers emanating from mysterious sources in Asia and ending up funding media, political, educational and religious activities in the United States.

By the early 1980s, that federal money-laundering probe had led to the criminal charges against Moon for tax evasion, a prosecution that the new Reagan-Bush Justice Department tried to derail but couldn’t because it was being handled by career prosecutors in New York City. Moon was convicted in 1982 and imprisoned for 13 months.

Buying Influence

But Moon’s influence-buying operation was only just beginning.

He launched the Washington Times in 1982 and its staunch support for Reagan-Bush political interests quickly made it a favorite of Reagan, Bush and other influential Republicans. Moon also made sure that his steady flow of cash found its way into the pockets of key conservative operatives, especially when they were most in need, when they were facing financial crises.

For instance, when the New Right’s direct-mail whiz Richard Viguerie fell on hard times in the late 1980s, Moon had a corporation run by a chief lieutenant, Bo Hi Pak, buy one of Viguerie’s properties for $10 million. [See Orange County Register, Dec. 21, 1987; Washington Post, Oct. 15, 1989]

Moon also used the Washington Times and its affiliated publications to create seemingly legitimate conduits to funnel money to individuals and companies. In another example of Moon’s largesse, the Washington Times hired Viguerie to conduct a pricy direct-mail subscription drive, boosting his profit margin.

Another case of saving a right-wing icon occurred when the Rev. Jerry Falwell was facing financial ruin over the debts piling up at Liberty University.

But the fundamentalist Christian school in Lynchburg, Va., got a last-minute bail-out in the mid-1990s ostensibly from two Virginia businessmen, Dan Reber and Jimmy Thomas, who used their non-profit Christian Heritage Foundation to snap up a large chunk of Liberty’s debt for $2.5 million, a fraction of its face value.

Falwell rejoiced and called the moment “the greatest single day of financial advantage” in the school’s history, even though it was accomplished at the disadvantage of many small true-believing investors who had bought the church construction bonds through a Texas company.

But Falwell’s secret benefactor behind the debt purchase was Sun Myung Moon, who was kept in the background partly because of his controversial Biblical interpretations that hold Jesus to have been a failure and because of Moon’s alleged brainwashing of thousands of young Americans, often shattering their bonds with their biological families.

Moon had used his tax-exempt Women’s Federation for World Peace to funnel $3.5 million to the Reber-Thomas Christian Heritage Foundation, the non-profit that purchased the school’s debt. I stumbled onto this Moon-Falwell connection by examining the Internal Revenue Service filings of Moon’s front groups.


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. The indirect funneling of money to Falwell’s school paralleled the technique used a decade later to donate funds to George H.W. Bush’s presidential library. [For more on Moon’s funding of the Right, see Robert Parry’s Secrecy & Privilege.]

Bush Speeches

Moon also used the Women’s Federation to pay substantial speaking fees to George H.W. Bush, who gave talks at Moon-sponsored events. In September 1995, Bush and his wife, Barbara, gave six speeches in Asia for the Women’s Federation. In one speech on Sept. 14 to 50,000 Moon supporters in Tokyo, Bush said “what really counts is faith, family and friends.”


Moon’s wife, Hak Ja Han Moon, followed the ex-President 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]

In fall 1996, Moon needed the ex-President’s help again. Moon was trying to replicate his Washington Times influence in South America by opening a regional newspaper, Tiempos del Mundo. But South American journalists were recounting unsavory chapters of Moon’s history, including his links to South Korea’s feared intelligence service and various neo-fascist organizations.

In the early 1980s, Moon had used friendships with the military dictatorships in Argentina and Uruguay – which had been responsible for tens of thousands of political murders – to invest in those two countries. There also were allegations of Moon’s links to the region’s major drug traffickers. [For details on the drug ties, see Robert Parry’s Lost History.]

Heaven Sent

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 elected president, Carlos Menem, decided to reject Moon’s invitation.

But Moon had a trump card: 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.

As the headliner at the newspaper’s 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.

“I want to salute Reverend Moon,” 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 [Moon] interfered with the running of the paper, a paper that in my view brings sanity to Washington, D.C.”


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 Washington Times as a voice of “sanity” may be a matter of opinion, Bush’s vouching for its 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.

Ties That Bind


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.

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 told me that the total spending on Bush ran into the millions, with one source telling me that Bush stood to make as much as $10 million from Moon’s organization.


The senior George Bush may have had a political motive, too. 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.

North Korean Cash


Moon, who has the status of a U.S. permanent resident alien, has skirted other federal laws, including prohibitions on financial relations with the hard-line communist government of North Korea.

Despite Moon’s history of extreme anti-communism, Moon began spreading money around inside North Korea – much as he has in other countries – while seeking business advantages during the first Bush administration, according to U.S. intelligence documents.

U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency documents, which I obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request, showed Moon’s organization paying millions of dollars to North Korean leaders. The payments included a $3 million “birthday present” to current communist leader Kim Jong Il and offshore payments amounting to “several tens of million dollars” to the previous communist dictator, Kim Il Sung, the partially declassified documents said.

Yet, in the 1990s, while Moon was passing out money, North Korea was scrambling for the resources to develop missiles and other advanced weaponry, including a nuclear weapons capability. Moon’s activities attracted the attention of the Defense Intelligence Agency because it is responsible for monitoring potential military threats to the United States.

Moon negotiated one North Korean business deal in 1991, after face-to-face meetings with Kim Il Sung, the longtime communist leader, the DIA documents said.

“These talks took place secretly, without the knowledge of the South Korean government,” the DIA wrote on Feb. 2, 1994. “In the original deal with Kim [Il Sung], Moon paid several tens of million dollars as a down-payment into an overseas account,” the DIA said in a cable dated Aug. 14, 1994.

The DIA said Moon's organization also delivered money to Kim Il Sung's son and successor, Kim Jong Il.

“In 1993, the Unification Church sold a piece of property located in Pennsylvania,” the DIA reported on Sept. 9, 1994. “The profit on the sale, approximately $3 million was sent through a bank in China to the Hong Kong branch of the KS [South Korean] company ‘Samsung Group.’ The money was later presented to Kim Jung Il [Kim Jong Il] as a birthday present.”


After Kim Il Sung's death in 1994 and his succession by his son, Kim Jong Il, Moon dispatched his longtime aide, Bo Hi Pak, to ensure that the business deals were still on track with Kim Jong Il “and his coterie,” the DIA reported.

“If necessary, Moon authorized Pak to deposit a second payment for Kim Jong Il,” the DIA wrote.

The DIA declined to elaborate on the documents. “As for the documents you have, you have to draw your own conclusions,” said DIA spokesman, U.S. Navy Capt. Michael Stainbrook. [See two of the DIA documents below]

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SUMMARY: UNIFICATION CHURCH OFFICIAL ((PAK)) BO-HI'S PRIMARY PURPOSE IN GOING TO KN CAPITAL PYONGYANG IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING KN PRESIDENT ((KIM)) IL-SUNG'S DEATH WAS NOT TO EXPRESS CONDOLENCES BUT RATHER TO INSURE CONTINUITY OF THE BUSINESS AND REAL ESTATE ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN THE UNIFICATION CHURCH AND THE KN GOVERNMENT.

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[DELETE] UNIFICATION CHURCH OFFICIAL ((PAK)) BO-HI'S PRIMARY PURPOSE IN GOING TO KN CAPITAL PYONGYANG IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING KN PRESIDENT ((KIM)) IL-SUNG'S DEATH WAS NOT TO EXPRESS CONDOLENCES BUT RATHER TO INSURE CONTINUITY OF THE BUSINESS AND REAL ESTATE ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN THE UNIFICATION CHURCH AND THE KN GOVERNMENT. PRIOR TO HIS DEATH KIM HAD AGREED TO A DEAL WITH UNIFICATION CHURCH LEADER ((MOON)) SUNG-MYUNG THAT GAVE KN GOVERNMENT APPROVAL FOR THE UNIFICATION CHURCH TO CONSTRUCT FOUR (4) HOTELS IN PYONGYANG OVER TIME AND TO UNDERTAKE A MAJOR RESORT DEVELOPMENT IN KUMGANG-SAN. THE TOTAL VALUE OF THE DEAL IS ESTIMATED AT OVER 500 MILLION USD. IN THE ORIGINAL DEAL WITH KIM, MOON PAID SEVERAL TENS OF MILLION DOLLARS AS A DOWNPAYMENT INTO AN OVERSEAS ACCOUNT.

3. MOON ORDERED PAK TO MAKE THE VISIT TO PYONGYANG WITH THE PRINCIPAL MISSION OF CONFIRMING THAT THE PRIOR DEAL WAS STILL IN PLACE WITH KIM'S SON ((KIM)) JONG-IL AND HIS COTERIE. IF NECESSARY, MOON AUTHORIZED PAK TO DEPOSIT A SECOND PAYMENT FOR KIM JONG-IL. HOWEVER, SINCE PAK HAS NOT RETURNED TO KS, IT HAS NOT BEEN POSSIBLE TO CONFIRM WHETHER ANY FURTHER PAYMENT HAS BEEN MADE AT THIS TIME.

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SUMMARY: KN HAS ESTABLISHED RELATIONS WITH THE UNIFIED SPIRITUAL CHURCH FOR WORLD CHRISTIANS (UNIFICATION CHURCH) AFTER ITS FOUNDER ((MUN)) SUN MYUNG (STC. 2429/7639/0730) MADE DONATIONS TO KN OF 450 BILLION YEN IN 1991 AND 3 MILLION DOLLARS IN 1993.

TEXT: 1. SINCE MUN FORMED THE UNIFICATION CHURCH IN KS IN 1954, HE HAS BEEN STRONGLY CRITICIZED IN KN AS THE LEADER OF AN ANTI-COMMUNIST MOVEMENT, WHILE MUN HAS CRITICIZED THE STATE OF RELIGION IN KN, CLAIMING FORMER PRESIDENT KIM IL SUNG WAS A FALSE MESSIAH. IN NOVEMBER 1991, A KS CITIZEN RESIDING IN THE UNITED STATES, ((PAK)) KYONG YUN (STC. 2613/2417/0336), ACTED AS A INTERMEDIARY TO OBTAIN A KN ENTRY VISA FOR MUN AND TO ARRANGE FOR A MEETING BETWEEN MUN AND KIM IL SUNG. PAK IS THE CHAIRMAN OF THE KIMKANGSAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP KNOWN TO BE A PRO-KN COMPANY.

2. BETWEEN 30NOV91 AND 07DEC91, MUN VISITED KN AND WAS GRANTED A MEETING WITH PRESIDENT KIM. THEIR DISCUSSION INCLUDED THE REUNIFICATION OF KS AND KN, KN NUCLEAR FACILITIES INSPECTIONS AND MUN'S ASSURANCES TO ENCOURAGE KS AND KN CITIZENS RESIDING OVERSEAS TO BEGIN INVESTING IN KN. IN ADDITION, THERE WAS AN AGREEMENT REGARDING ECONOMIC COOPERATION FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION OF KN'S ECONOMY WHICH INCLUDED ESTABLISHMENT OF A JOINT VENTURE TO DEVELOP TOURISM AT KIMLANGSAN, KN; INVESTMENT IN THE TUMANGANG RIVER DEVELOPMENT; AND, INVESTMENT TO CONSTRUCT THE LIGHT INDUSTRY BASE AT WONSAN, KN. IT IS BELIEVED THAT DURING THEIR MEETING MUN DONATED 450 BILLION YEN TO KN.

3. IN CONSIDERATION OF MUN'S ECONOMIC COOPERATION, KIM GRANTED MUN A 99 YEAR LEASE ON A 9 SQUARE KILOMETER PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED IN CHONGCHU, PYONGANPUXTO, KN. CHONGCHU IS MUN'S BIRTH PLACE AND THE PROPERTY WILL BE USED AS A CENTER FOR THE UNIFICATION CHURCH. IT IS BEING REFERRED TO AS THE HOLY LAND BY UNIFICATION CHURCH BELIEVERS AND MUN AS BEEN GRANTED EXTRATERRITORIALITY DURING THE LIFE OF THE LEASE. SINCE 1992, THE UNIFICATION CHURCH AFFILIATED TOURIST COMPANY "THE SEIL TOURIST" AND "THE KIMKANGSAN INTERNATIONAL TOURIST, INC.", THE JAPAN BRANCH OF THE KIMKANGSAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP, HAVE CO-SPONSORED FOUR TOURS TO THE HOLY LAND. SO FAR, 534 BELIEVERS HAVE MADE THE TREK TO VISIT MUN'S BIRTH PLACE. CONSTRUCTION OF CHURCH FACILITIES ON THE SITE ARE SCHEDULED TO BEGIN IN SEP94 WITH ESTIMATED COMPLETION IN SEP99. MUN HAS AGREED TO GIVE HALF OF ALL CAPITAL AND PROPERTY BROUGHT INTO THE LEASED LAND TO KN.

4. IN 1993, THE UNIFICATION CHURCH SOLD A PIECE OF PROPERTY LOCATED IN PENNSYLVANIA. THE PROFIT ON THE SALE, APPROXIMATELY $3,000,000, WAS SENT THROUGH A BANK IN CHINA TO THE HONG KONG BRANCH OF THE KS COMPANY "SAMSUNG GROUP". THE MONEY WAS LATER PRESENTED TO ((KIM)) JUNG IL (STC. 6855/2973/2480) AS A BIRTHDAY PRESENT.

5. IN JAN94, A JAPANESE TRADING COMPANY "TOUEN SHOJI", IN SUGINAMI-KU, TOKYO, PURCHASED 12 F AND G CLASS SUBMARINES FROM THE RUSSIAN PACIFIC FLEET HEADQUARTERS. THESE SUBMARINES WERE THEN SOLD TO A KN TRADING COMPANY. ALTHOUGH THIS TRANSACTION GARNERED A GREAT DEAL OF COVERAGE IN THE JAPANESE PRESS, IT WAS NOT DISCLOSED AT THE TIME THAT TOUEN SHOJI IS AN AFFILIATE OF THE UNIFICATION CHURCH.

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A. INASMUCH AS KN IS BECOMING MORE ISOLATED FROM THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY DUE TO ITS SUSPECTED NUCLEAR WEAPON DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM, IT IS SPECULATED KN WILL TRY TO USE THE UNIFICATION CHURCH'S SIGNIFICANT WORLD WIDE NETWORK TO RESHAPE ITS IMAGE. USING THE UNIFICATION CHURCH'S PERCEIVED INFLUENCE IN SUCH NEWSPAPERS AS THE SEIL DAILY NEWS AND THE WASHINGTON TIMES, ALONG WITH CHURCH AFFILIATED LOBBYISTS AND OTHER PERSONNEL LINKAGE, KN WILL TRY TO DELIVER ITS OPINIONS TO THE GOVERNMENTS OF THE WEST. THE INTENTION IS TO CREATE A FAVORABLE PUBLIC OPINION OF KN WITH THE HOPE OF INFLUENCING WESTERN GOVERNMENTS' POLICY DECISIONS. IN ADDITION, KN WILL TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE UNIFICATION CHURCH'S INVESTMENT IN THE FREE TRADE ZONE, DEVELOPMENT OF THE KIMKANGSAN TOURISM AND THE UNIFICATION CHURCH BELIEVERS' PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND, WITH THE HOPE OF RECONSTRUCTING ITS DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND OBTAINING WHAT HAS BECOME A CHRONIC SHORTAGE OF FOREIGN CURRENCY.

B. FOR YEARS MUN SUN MYUNG HAS WANTED TO ESTABLISH A RELIGIOUS STATE SIMILAR TO THE VATICAN CITY. HIS DECISION TO BUILD IT IN CHONGCHU, KN, HAS PREDICATED ON A NUMBER OF ISSUES. IT IS HIS PLACE OF BIRTH AND IN UNIFICATION CHURCH DOCTRINE, THE MESSIAH WILL BE BORN ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA. HIS ACTIVITIES IN THE UNITED STATES AND SOUTH KOREA HAVE BECOME SUBJECT TO RESTRICTION AFTER HIS CONVICTION FOR TAX EVASION IN BOTH COUNTRIES. HIS ENTRY IN INTO JAPAN, WHERE UNIFICATION CHURCH ACTIVITIES HAVE BECOME THE MOST ACTIVE, HAS ALSO BEEN RESTRICTED. WITH THE CHURCH'S PROPOSED INVESTMENT IN KN, THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A HOLY LAND IN CHONGCHU, KN, COULD BE EASILY REALIZED.

C. [DELETE] IN THE FUTURE, THE UNIFICATION CHURCH WILL PROBABLY MANDATE A TRIP TO THE HOLY LAND FOR ITS BELIEVERS AND ASSETS HELD WORLDWIDE WILL LIKELY BE TRANSFERRED TO CHONGCHU.

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Contacted in Seoul, South Korea, Bo Hi Pak, a former publisher of the Washington Times, denied that payments were made to individual North Korean leaders and called “absolutely untrue” the DIA’s description of the $3 million land sale benefiting Kim Jong Il. But Bo Hi Pak acknowledged that Moon met with North Korean officials and negotiated business deals with them in the early 1990s. Pak said the North Korean business investments were structured through South Korean entities.

“Reverend Moon is not doing this in his own name,” Pak said.

Pak said he went to North Korea in 1994, after Kim Il Sung’s death, only to express “condolences” to Kim Jong Il on behalf of Moon and his wife. Pak denied that another purpose of the trip was to pass money to Kim Jong Il or to his associates.

Asked about the seeming contradiction between Moon’s avowed anti-communism and his friendship with leaders of a communist state, Pak said, “This is time for reconciliation. We're not looking at ideological differences. We are trying to help them out” with food and other humanitarian needs.

Samsung officials said they could find no information in their files about the alleged $3 million payment.

Embargo Busting

North Korean officials clearly valued their relationship with Moon. In February 2000, on Moon’s 80th birthday, Kim Jong Il sent Moon a gift of rare wild ginseng, an aromatic root used medicinally, Reuters reported.

Because of the long-term U.S. embargo against North Korea – eased only in 2000 – Moon’s alleged payments to the communist leaders raised potential legal issues for Moon especially if some of the money stemmed from a land sale in Pennsylvania.

“Nobody in the United States was supposed to be providing funding to anybody in North Korea, period, under the Treasury (Department's) sanction regime,” said Jonathan Winer, former deputy assistant secretary of state handling international crime.

The U.S. embargo of North Korea dated back to the Korean War. With a few exceptions for humanitarian goods, the embargo barred trade and financial dealings between North Korea and “all U.S. citizens and permanent residents wherever they are located, … and all branches, subsidiaries and controlled affiliates of U.S. organizations throughout the world.”

Moon became a permanent resident of the United States in 1973, according to Justice Department records. When interviewed in 2000, Bo Hi Pak said Moon had kept his “green card” status. Though often in South Korea and South America, Moon maintained a residence near Tarrytown, north of New York City, and controlled dozens of affiliated U.S. companies.

Direct payments to foreign leaders in connection with business deals also could prompt questions about possible violations of the U.S. Corrupt Practices Act, a prohibition against overseas bribery.

Ironically, although Moon reportedly gave North Korea desperately needed foreign capital, Moon’s Washington Times attacked the Clinton administration for failing to take a more aggressive stand against North Korea’s missile program. The newspaper called the administration’s policy an “abdication of responsibility for national security.”

Moon also was consolidating his influence with American conservatives as he was growing increasingly anti-American. While former President Bush was hailing Moon in public in the mid-1990s, Moon was calling the United States “Satan’s harvest” and claiming that American women descended from a “line of prostitutes.”

But Moon understood one basic rule of politics that applied the world over: money talks. He knew he could get politicians to do his bidding if the bribes were big enough. In one sermon on Jan. 2, 1996, Moon was unusually blunt about how he expected his wealth to buy influence among the powerful in South America, just as it had 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.”

For Moon, there has been no bigger fish than the powerful Bush family and its many friends in the U.S. government.


Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'
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Re: Dark Side of Rev. Moon: Buying the Right, by Robert Parr

Postby admin » Tue Jan 23, 2018 3:33 am

$1 million Moonie mystery
by Rick Casey
June 8, 2006, 10:36PM
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle

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IT was a dark night in a city that knows how to keep its secrets.

The phone rang on my desk, waking me from a reverie I don't remember.

"Casey," I said, hoping to sound like a private eye.

The guy on the other end really was a private eye. Not Garrison Keillor's "Guy Noir," but a Virginia electronic gumshoe named Larry Zilliox.

Maybe you have a hobby. Zilliox's is keeping tabs on the sprawling empire of the world's wealthiest self-described Messiah, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.

In the course of his probing, Zilliox came across an odd entry in the most recent tax filing of the Washington Times Foundation, which is associated with the conservative newspaper founded in 1982 by Moon.

The document was dated mid-2004 and included a list of organizations to which grants had been made.

A million bucks to Houston?

Three received grants totaling $9,000.

The New York headquarters of Moon's Unification Church received $11,200.

Another of Moon's organizations, the American Family Coalition Inc., received a grant of $254,500.

Then came the grabber: a whopping $1 million to the Greater Houston Community Foundation.

Why would Moon's Washington Times Foundation give a million bucks to Houston?

Zilliox said he figured I'd have a better chance of finding out than he would.

Maybe he was right.

I decided to take the direct approach.

I called the Washington Times Foundation, but the number listed on its tax form was no longer working.

The Bush connection

I called the Washington Times and asked for the foundation. I reached the voice mail of a separate foundation, but my call was not returned.

I located two of the officers of the foundation at the Washington Times and another at UPI (also owned by the Moon organization), but my phone calls and e-mails went unanswered.

So I called Steve Maislin, president and CEO of the Greater Houston Community Foundation.

He wasn't in, but I left a message asking why the Washington Times Foundation would give $1 million to his foundation. He called and left a message in return.

He couldn't legally tell me, he said.

Later I reached Maislin and asked him if he could point me to the law that bound his lips. He said he misspoke.

"I meant that under the law it's not a public record," he said. "We're not required to disclose donations in or grants out in our tax returns. We don't as a matter of policy."

Actually, they do report the grants they give, as we will see below.

He said some people who give money want it kept private so they won't be badgered by fundraisers.

Zilliox had a theory. He figured Moon gave the money to the Houston foundation as a pass-through to the presidential library of the elder President Bush.

It wouldn't be the first connection between Moon and Bush. In 1995 Bush was handsomely paid to make six speeches to Moon-related groups in Japan.

The next year he would go to Buenos Aires, Argentina, to celebrate the opening of a new Moonie newspaper there.


Zilliox's notion turned out not to be an idle theory. The long list of grant recipients listed in the community foundation's tax return that year included the George Bush Presidential Library Foundation at Texas A&M.

The amount: $2,132,471.

So I called Rod Thornton at the Bush library foundation.

He hesitated for a moment, then explained that the donation from the Greater Houston Community Foundation came from proceeds from Bush's 80th birthday celebration in 2004, which included a huge party at Minute Maid Park and a fundraising extravaganza to benefit three of the former president's favorite causes: his library, the Points of Light Foundation he founded, and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

M.D. Anderson received $4.4 million from the Greater Houston Community Foundation that year, and the Points of Light Foundation received $1.8 million.

One call remained, to Jim McGrath, a former speechwriter for the former president who still serves as a family spokesman.

He explained that the money raised through Bush's birthday bash was funneled through the Greater Houston Community Foundation because of its tax-exempt status.

And did $1 million come from the Washington Times Foundation?

"We're in an uncomfortable position," he said. "If a donor doesn't want to be identified we need to honor their privacy."

I asked him about another part of Zilliox's theory: that the donation was made to help persuade Bush's son, the current president, to grant Moon a pardon for a 1982 felony tax evasion conviction that had put him in prison for 13 months.

Moon had applied for a pardon from the elder president Bush, but withdrew the request.

"If that's why he gave the grant, he's throwing his money away," said McGrath. "That's not the way the Bushes operate."

He added, "President Bush has been very grateful for the friendship shown to him by the Washington Times Foundation, and the Washington Times serves a vital role in Washington. But there can't be any connection to any kind of a pardon."

You can write to Rick Casey at P.O. Box 4260, Houston, TX 77210, or e-mail him at [email protected].
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Re: Dark Side of Rev. Moon: Buying the Right, by Robert Parr

Postby admin » Tue Jul 19, 2022 5:24 am

Shinzo Abe’s assassin forced to give up college after mother's $722,000 donation to Unification Church, says uncle
by Jane Nam
Fri, July 15, 2022 at 6:04 PM

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Shinzo Abe, 90th, 96th, 98th Prime Minister of Japan

The uncle of Shinzo Abe’s suspected shooter Tetsuya Yamagami stated that Yamagami’s mother had donated approximately 100 million yen ($721,875) to the Unification Church, leading to the family’s alleged financial ruin.

Yamagami reportedly told police that he had targeted the former prime minister due to Abe’s affiliation with the Unification Church, which Yamagami blamed for bankrupting his mother due to its forceful donating practices.

On Friday, the uncle, who is the 77-year-old older brother of Yamagami’s father, shared that Yamagami’s mother first joined the church in 1991 after her husband’s suicide in 1984.

She made multiple donations to the religious group throughout her time as a devoted member, including proceeds from the sale of the family’s property and house.

Despite becoming bankrupt in 2002, she continued giving to the church, albeit in smaller amounts, under the principle of “world peace and unification.”

“I believe she was a very important follower of the church. She was under mind control,” the uncle said.

He added that the family was thrown into poverty and Yamagami was forced to give up college due to financial ruin.


“He was extremely smart just like his father,” the uncle recalled of Yamagami. “He was also hardworking and I only have good memories of him.”

Church officials stated at a news conference on Monday that it had no direct relationship to Abe, although it did with other lawmakers through an affiliated organization.

It also insisted that it had returned 50 million yen ($360,929) back to her, while claiming there were also no records of her donations to the organization.

The Unification Church was first founded in South Korea in 1954 by Rev. Sun Myung Moon, who was heavily influenced by the Confucian idea that world peace begins with harmonious families.

The church is known for its mass weddings, in which leaders officiate thousands of new couples at once in a single gathering, and its influence over conservative political parties.

Yamagami reportedly planned to kill the church’s religious leaders first but changed his target to Abe after watching a video message sent by Abe to one of the Unification Church’s affiliates.

COVID-19 also prevented him from being able to travel to South Korea, where many of the seniors are.

Yamagami told police that he began experimenting with making his own firearms around spring of last year and had initially thought of making a bomb instead of a gun.

**********************

Why did Abe appear in a Unification Church video?
by Cho Yeon-hyun
religion correspondent
Hankyoreh Hani.Co.Kr.
Posted on : Jul.12,2022 17:55 KST Modified on : Jul.12,2022 17:55 KST



The relationship between the Unification Church and Japanese political circles is being all the more highlighted due to the religious movement’s enormous success in Japan

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Former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers an address for “Think Tank 2022,” an event jointly organized by the Universal Peace Federation and the FFWPU in September 2021. (provided by UPF)

Reports have surfaced that Tetsuya Yamagami, the man who fatally shot former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, referenced his mother’s religion — the Unification Church — as the motivation for his actions, drawing interest to the religious movement.

While being questioned by police Yamagami reportedly said that his mother is “a follower of the Unification Church” and that he had “targeted Abe due to his ties” to the group. Additionally, he reportedly stated that he “originally wanted to target the leader of the Unification Church,” but believing it would be difficult, he’d attacked Abe, believing the former prime minister of Japan to have ties with the church.

Following her husband’s death, Yamagami’s mother took over his construction company until she went bankrupt 20 years ago. Regarding this, Yamagami reportedly was resentful of the Unification Church, as he believed his mother — a follower of the church — made large donations to the religious movement.

The Unification Church released a statement Monday, in which it said that Yamagami “is not a member of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU), and there are no records indicating he was a member of the federation in the past.” The church added that the suspect’s mother has been attending Family Federation events once a month.

According to Japanese media, Yamagami reportedly “believed [Abe] had ties [with the Unification Church] due to a video message he sent [to the church] and was not motivated by a grudge concerning [Abe’s] politics.”

As a matter of fact, last September, Abe delivered a keynote address at the Rally of Hope event co-hosted by the Universal Peace Federation — a group affiliated with the Unification Church — and the FFWPU via video following their launch ceremony for “Think Tank 2022: Toward Peaceful Reunification of the Korean Peninsula.” During his address, Abe said: “Some countries, including totalitarian and hegemonic regimes, are attempting to bring about change by force. Political maneuvering of this type should stop. [. . .] Thus, the need for more solidarity between countries that share the values of freedom and democracy — such as Japan, the United States, Taiwan and South Korea — is more pressing than ever.”

The event saw other participants along with Abe, such as former US President Donald Trump, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, and former President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso.

Concerning this, the Unification Church remarked in its statement, “The suspect’s argument that he targeted Abe, one of the top leaders of Japan, simply because he delivered a video address for our federation does not align with common sense.” It continued, “As the incident was an extreme one born out of a difficult growth process within a family that’s hard to understand, we anticipate law enforcement agencies to clearly investigate the criminal motive of the suspect.”

Abe seems to have made his video address for the Unification Church event due to the long-held ties between the church and right-wing political forces in Japan. Moon Sun-myung (1920-2012), the founder of the Unification Church, reportedly held intimate ties with right-wing Japanese politicians ever since the founding of the Japan chapter of the International Federation for Victory over Communism (IFVOC) in April 1968.

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Moon Sun-myung, the founder of the Unification Church (Hankyoreh file photo)

The relationship between the Unification Church and Japanese right-wing political forces can also be seen in the fact that former Japanese Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, Abe’s maternal grandfather and an ultranationalist within the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), visited a Unification Church in Japan in April 1970. Afterward, Kishi reportedly proactively utilized the IFVOC in Japan to garner financial support and build consensus for anti-communist legislation such as the establishment of an anti-espionage act by the LDP in the 1970s.

Hiroshi Yamaguchi, the president of the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales — a team of lawyers who have brought suits for damages against the Unification Church — and a lawyer who wrote the expose concerning the church titled “The Family Federation for World Peace and Unification,” pinpointed Kishi and Ryoichi Sasakawa, a former member of the House of Representatives and a Class A war criminal, as key figures who helped the church gain political influence within the LDP during an interview with CBS.

Yamaguchi also said, “The Unification Church’s political empowerment began during the time of Kishi, Abe’s grandfather, with Sasakawa acting as a bridge.” He further claimed that “North Korea policies and anti-communist movements under conservative administrations were carried out through the help of the Unification Church’s IFVOC, and as there are barely any young election campaigners or party members in Japan, Japanese politicians probably could not refuse funds and campaigners systematically sent by the Unification Church.”


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Moon Sung-myung speaks at an event at the Capitol in Washington DC in April 2004, where he crowned himself as “king of peace.”

After releasing a chart depicting links between 128 Japanese lawmakers at the time and the IFVOC and the Unification Church in February 1999, the Japanese magazine Modern Weekly published an article criticizing Abe’s ties to the Unification Church, which the weekly described as “continuing since [Abe’s] grandfather’s generation.”

The Unification Church has also made similar claims. In an article published on July 20, 1986, the church’s bulletin asserted that “130 lawmakers elected in the House of Representatives and House of Councillors elections are proponents of victory over communism.” The church’s document compiling the sayings of its founder also contains a quotation in which Moon directly references his ties with Japanese political figures.

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Moon Sun-myung, the founder of the Unification Church (Hankyoreh file photo)

The relationship between the Unification Church and Japanese political circles is being all the more highlighted due to the religious movement’s enormous success in Japan. The church had its start in the country after Choi Sang-ik, a missionary of the church, arrived in Japan as a stowaway in October 1959. Subsequently, the church’s mission in Japan gained much traction, laying the foundation for the religion’s foray into and eventual anchoring in the US.

The Unification Church in Japan has gathered funds mostly through door-to-door sales via the so-called “spiritual sales” method. At its height, the church in Japan would send 10 billion yen back to the church’s headquarters every month.

The method stipulates that Unification Church followers should purchase items with spiritual capabilities and make donations so that their ancestors in hell in the spiritual realm may be put out of their suffering and their descendants may live safe and peaceful lives. Experts in religious circles and elsewhere have analyzed the method as having successfully taken advantage of traditional rituals through which Japanese people worship their ancestors.

The Unification Church sold items they claimed had supernatural spiritual powers, such as seals, flower vases, replicas of Dabo Pagoda and Seokga Pagoda in Korea, wooden beads, and ginseng extract.


When victims of the Unification Church’s sales activities came forward in great numbers, lawyers in Japan formed the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales to investigate related cases and come up with relief measures.

Regarding this, the Unification Church stated that “door-to-door sales through the spiritual sales was mostly carried out during the 1980s and has not been done since the 1990s.”

There are wildly different conjectures regarding the number of Unification Church followers in Japan, from ones that speculate the figure to be around 600,000 to ones that say it only amounts to around 10,000 and 20,000. Still, considering that 90% of the names listed at the entrance of Cheonjeong Palace, the world headquarters of the religion located in Seorak hills of Gapyeong County, Gyeonggi Province, as donors who contributed to the construction of the building are Japanese, it’s undeniable that the vast majority of donations received by the church are made by Japanese individuals.

Plus, an overwhelming majority of women who marry Korean men through mass weddings by the Unification Church are Japanese. The fact that Junko Sakurada, a famous pop idol during the 1970s in Japan, married an ordinary Korean office worker as designated by Moon during a 1992 mass wedding at Jamsil Olympic Stadium, garnered interest.

Born in 1920 in Chongju, North Pyongan Province, Moon founded the Unification Church in 1951. Based on its success in Japan, the church sent missionaries to 194 countries across the world, even going so far as to hold a mass rally that drew over 300,000 participants in Washington, DC, in 1976, thanks to which Moon was selected as “Person of the Year” by Newsweek.

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Moon Sun-myung embraces North Korean leader Kim Il-sung on Dec. 6, 1991, in Pyongyang. (Hankyoreh file photo)

After founding the IFVOC and leading anti-communist movements, Moon started the Washington Times in 1982, which served as a mouthpiece for far-right conservatives in US politics. Moon garnered international attention in 1990, when he met with Mikhail Gorbachev in Moscow in an exclusive meeting, and a year later, on Nov. 30, 1991, when he met with Kim Il-sung in Pyongyang.

Moon expanded his activities into fields other than religion and media as well, going into education via Sunhwa Arts Middle and High Schools, Kyung Bok Elementary School, Sunjung Middle and High Schools, Sun Moon University, and Cheongshim International Academy, and trying his hand in business endeavors through Ilhwa, Ilsung Construction, and Ilshin Stone.

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The Unification Church’s Cheonjeong Palace, located in Gapyeong, Gyeonggi Province (Hankyoreh file photo)

In 2009, to mark the 90th birthday of Moon, the Unification Church unveiled Cheonjeong Palace, the church’s headquarters covering 4,000 acres of land located in Seorak Township, Gapyeong County, Gyeonggi Province, carrying out a “coronation for the realm of liberation for God, the King of Kings.” Members of the church venerated Moon with such titles as “King of Kings,” “Savior,” “Messiah,” “True Father” and more.

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Han Hak-ja, current president of the Unification Church, blesses new couples at a mass wedding ceremony on April 16, 2022. (provided by the Unification Church)

Moon died on Sept. 3, 2012, at Cheongshim International Medical Center, now known as the HJM International Medical Center, located on Unification Church holy ground in Gapyeong, Gyeonggi Province.

In April 2008, he appointed his then 33-year-old son Moon Hyung-jin — also known as Sean Moon, the youngest son among his 13 children — to serve as international president of the FFWPU. However, Moon’s widow Han Hak-ja assumed full control after the founder’s death and has been acting as de facto leader of the Unification Church ever since.
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