The Consortium
Dark Side of Rev. Moon (Cont.): Drug Allies
(Posted in 1997)
By Robert Parry
Amid debates over the 115-year-old Pendleton Act and whether it covers
fund-raising phone calls from the White House, a more sinister money-in-politics
issue continues to go unnoticed: the vast political influence-buying
operation of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. The Clinton administration appears
no more interested in where Moon's mysterious millions originate than was
the Reagan-Bush administrations which benefited from Moon's largesse.
Our recent series, "Dark Side of Rev. Moon," documented how Moon's
organization purchased influence through secret payments to key political
figures, including former President George Bush and Religious Right leader
Jerry Falwell. Moon also financed costly media outlets, such as The
Washington Times. Moon has built this U.S. network even as he tells
his followers that America is "Satan's harvest" and vows to subjugate the
American people under a Korea-based theocracy.
The series also revealed that Moon's organization still engages in
questionable financial practices. According to court records, the Moon
organization has been laundering money and diverting funds to buy personal
luxuries for Moon's family, including cocaine for Moon's son, Hyo Jin.
The financial sleights-of-hand are reminiscent of offenses that led to
Moon's conviction for tax evasion in 1982.
But since our series ran, more troubling facts about Moon's international
political connections have been brought to our attention. Most disturbing,
given Moon's free-spending ways, are his long-standing ties to ultra-rightists
linked to Asian organized crime and to the Latin American drug trade.
These associations -- and Moon's deepening business operations in South
America -- underscore the need for the U.S. government to ascertain exactly
how Moon is financing his U.S. political empire.
Moon's representatives refuse to detail publicly how they sustain their
far-flung operations. But they angrily rebut 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]
But Moon's relationships with drug-tainted gangsters and corrupt right-wing
politicians go back to the early days of his Unification Church in Asia.
Moon's Korea-based church made its first important inroads in Japan in the
early 1960s after gaining the support of Ryoichi Sasakawa, a leader of the
Japanese yakuza crime syndicate who once hailed Italian dictator Benito
Mussolini as "the perfect fascist." In Japan and Korea, the shadowy yakuza
ran lucrative drug smuggling, gambling and prostitution rings.
The Sasakawa connection brought Moon both converts and clout because
Sasakawa was a behind-the-scenes leader of Japan's ruling Liberal
Democratic Party. On the international scene, Sasakawa helped found the
Asian People's Anti-Communist League, which united the heroin-stained
leadership of Nationalist China with rightists from Korea, Japan and
elsewhere in Asia. [For details, see Yakuza by David E. Kaplan
and Alec Dubro]
In 1966, the Asian league evolved into the World Anti-Communist League with
the inclusion of former Nazis from Europe, overt racialists from the United
States and "death squad" operatives from Latin America, along with more
traditional conservatives. Moon's followers played important roles in both
organizations, which also maintained close ties to the CIA.
South American Drugs
Meanwhile, after World War II, South America was becoming a crossroads for
Nazi fugitives and drug smugglers. Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, the
so-called Butcher of Lyons, earned his living in Bolivia by selling his
intelligence skills, while other ex-Nazis trafficked in narcotics. Often
the lines crossed.
In those years, Auguste Ricord, a French war criminal who had collaborated
with the Gestapo, set up shop in Paraguay. Ricord opened up 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 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 this
famous French Connection and won extraditions of Ricord and David in 1972.
But by then, powerful drug lords had forged strong ties to South America's
military leaders. Other Trafficante-connected groups, including right-wing
anti-Castro Cubans in Miami, eagerly filled the drug void. Heroin from the
Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia quickly replaced the French Connection
heroin that had come mostly from the Middle East.
During this period, the CIA actively collaborated with right-wing army
officers to oust left-leaning governments. And amid this swirl of
anti-communism, Moon became active in South America. His first visit to
Argentina was in 1965 when he blessed a square behind the presidential Pink
House in Buenos Aires. He returned a decade later and began making high-level
contacts in Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Bolivia and Uruguay.
The far-right gained control of Argentina in 1976 with a Dirty War that
"disappeared" tens of thousands of Argentines. Michael Levine, a star
undercover agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration, was assigned to
Buenos Aires and was struck how "death was very much a way of life in
Argentina." [See Levine's Big White Lie]
A Nazi Reunion
In nearby coca-producing Bolivia, Nazi fugitive Klaus Barbie was working as
a Bolivian intelligence officer and drawing up plans for a putsch that
would add that central nation to the region's "stable axis" of right-wing
regimes. Barbie contacted Argentine intelligence for help.
One of the first Argentine intelligence officers who arrived was Lt. Alfred
Mario Mingolla. "Before our departure, we received a dossier on [Barbie],"
Mingolla later told German investigative reporter Kai Hermann. "There it
stated that he was of great use to Argentina because he played an important
role in all of Latin America in the fight against communism. From the
dossier, it was also clear that Altmann worked for the Americans." [For an
English translation of Hermann's detailed account, see Covert Action
Information Bulletin, Winter 1986]
As the Bolivian coup took shape, Bolivian Col. Luis Arce-Gomez, the cousin
of cocaine kingpin Roberto Suarez, recruited neo-fascist terrorists such as
Italian Stefano della Chiaie who had been working with the Argentine death
squads. [See Cocaine Politics by Peter Dale Scott and Jonathan
Marshall] Dr. Alfredo Candia, the Bolivian leader of the World
Anti-Communist League, was coordinating the arrival of these paramilitary
operatives from Argentina and Europe, Hermann reported. Meanwhile, Barbie
started a secret lodge, called Thule. During meetings, he lectured to his
followers underneath swastikas by candlelight.
While the CIA was encouraging this aggressive anti-communism on one level,
Levine and his DEA field agents were moving against some of the
conspirators for drug crimes. In May 1980, DEA in Miami seized 854 pounds
of cocaine base and arrested two top Bolivian traffickers from the Roberto
Suarez organization. But Levine saw the bust double-crossed, he suspected,
for geo-political reasons.
One suspect, Jose Roberto Gasser "was almost immediately released from
custody by the Miami U.S. attorney's office," Levine wrote. (Gasser was
the son of Bolivian WACL associate Erwin Gasser, a leading figure in the
upcoming coup.) The other defendant saw his bail lowered, letting him flee
the United States. Levine worried about the fate of Bolivian officials who
had helped DEA. [See Levine's Deep Cover]
On June 17, 1980, in nearly public planning for the coup, six of Bolivia's
biggest traffickers met with the military conspirators to hammer out a
financial deal for future protection of the cocaine trade. A La Paz
businessman said the coming putsch should be called the "Cocaine Coup," a
name that would stick. [Cocaine Politics]
Less than three weeks later, on July 6, DEA agent Levine met with a
Bolivian trafficker named Hugo Hurtado-Candia. Over drinks, Hurtado
outlined plans for the "new government" in which his niece Sonia Atala, a
major cocaine supplier, will "be in a very strong position."
Later, an Argentine secret policeman told Levine that the CIA knew about
the coup. "You North Americans amaze me. Don't you speak to your own
people?" the officer wondered. "Do you think Bolivia's government -- or
any government in South America -- can be changed without your government
and mine being aware of it?"
When Levine asked why that affected the planned DEA investigation, the
Argentine answered, "Because the same people he's naming as drug dealers
are the people we are helping to rid Bolivia of leftists. ...Us. The
Argentines ... working with your CIA." [Big White Lie]
The Cocaine Coup Cometh
On July 17, the Cocaine Coup began, spearheaded by Barbie and his
neo-fascist goon squad dubbed Fiances of Death. "The masked thugs were
not Bolivians; they spoke Spanish with German, French and Italian
accents," Levine wrote. "Their uniforms bore neither national
identification nor any markings, although many of them wore Nazi swastika
armbands and insignias."
The slaughter was fierce. When the putschists stormed the national labor
headquarters, they wounded labor leader Marcelo Quiroga, who had led the
effort to indict former military dictator Hugo Banzer on drug and
corruption charges. Quiroga "was dragged off to police headquarters to be
the object of a game played by some of the torture experts imported from
Argentina's dreaded Mechanic School of the Navy," Levine wrote.
"These experts applied their 'science' to Quiroga as a lesson to the
Bolivians, who were a little backward in such matters. They kept Quiroga
alive and suffering for hours. His castrated, tortured body was found days
later in a place called 'The valley of the Moon' in southern La Paz."
Women captives were gang-raped as part of their torture.
To Levine back in Buenos Aires, it was soon clear "that the primary goal of
the revolution was the protection and control of Bolivia's cocaine industry.
All major drug traffickers in prison were released, after which they joined
the neo-Nazis in their rampage. Government buildings were invaded and
trafficker files were either carried off or burned. Government employees
were tortured and shot, the women tied and repeatedly raped by the
paramilitaries and the freed traffickers."
The fascists celebrated with swastikas and shouts of "Heil Hitler!" Hermann
reported. Col. Arce-Gomez, a central-casting image of a bemedaled,
pot-bellied Latin dictator, grabbed broad powers as Interior Minister.
Gen. Luis Garcia Meza was installed as Bolivia's new president.
Moon & the Putschists
Among 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 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, one of
Moon's anti-communist organizations, listed as members nearly all the
leading Bolivian coup-makers. [CAIB, Winter 1986]
After the coup, Arce-Gomez went into partnership with big
narco-traffickers, including Trafficante's Cuban-American smugglers.
Klaus Barbie and his neo-fascists got a new assignment: protecting
Bolivia's major cocaine barons and transporting drugs to the border.
[Cocaine Politics]
"The paramilitary units -- conceived by Barbie as a new type of SS -- sold
themselves to the cocaine barons," concluded Hermann. "The attraction of
fast money in the cocaine trade was stronger than the idea of a national
socialist revolution in Latin America."
According to Levine, Arce-Gomez boasted to one top trafficker: "We will
flood America's borders with cocaine." It was boast that the coup-makers
backed up.
"Bolivia soon became the principal supplier of cocaine base to the then
fledgling Colombian cartels, making themselves the main suppliers of
cocaine to the United States," Levine said. "And it could not have been
done without the tacit help of DEA and the active, covert help of the
CIA."
On Dec. 16, 1980, Cuban-American intelligence operative Ricardo Morales
told a Florida prosecutor that he had become an informer in Operation
Tick-Talks, a Miami-based investigation that implicated Frank Castro and
other Bay of Pigs veterans in a conspiracy to import cocaine from the new
military rulers of Bolivia. [Cocaine Politics]
Years later, Medellin cartel money-launderer Ramon Milian Rodriguez
testified before Senate hearings chaired by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
Milian Rodriguez stated that in the early days of the cartel, "Bolivia was
much more significant than the other countries." [April 6, 1988]
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 often seen
together in apparent prayer. Mingolla, the Argentine intelligence officer,
described Ward as his CIA paymaster, with the $1,500 monthly salary coming
from the CAUSA office of Ward's representative. [CAIB, Winter 1986]
On May 31, 1981, Moon representatives sponsored a CAUSA reception at the
Sheraton Hotel's Hall of Freedom in La Paz. Bo Hi Pak and 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.
Cocaine Stresses
But by late 1981, the obvious cocaine taint was straining U.S.-Bolivian
relations. "The Moon sect disappeared overnight from Bolivia as
clandestinely as they had arrived," Hermann reported. Only Ward and a
couple of others stayed on with the Bolivian information agency as it
worked on a transition back to civilian rule.
According to Hermann's account, Mingolla met Ward in the cafeteria Fontana
of La Paz's Hotel Plaza in March 1982. Ward was discouraged about the
Bolivian operation. "The whole affair with Altmann [Barbie], with the
whole fascism and Nazism bit, that was a dead-end street," Ward complained.
"It was stupid having Moon and CAUSA here." [CAIB, Winter 1986]
Ward could not be reached for comment about this article.
The Cocaine Coup leaders soon found themselves on the run. Interior
Minister Arce-Gomez was eventually extradited to Miami and is serving a
30-year sentence for drug trafficking. Roberto Suarez got a 15-year prison
sentence. Gen. Garcia Meza is 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 paid little price for the Cocaine Coup. Funding
U.S. conservative political conferences and founding the ultra-conservative
Washington Times in 1982, Moon ingratiated himself to President
Reagan and other leading Republicans. Moon also continued to build a
political-economic base in South America.
In 1984, The New York Times called Moon's church "one of the
largest foreign investors" in Uruguay, having invested some $70 million in
the three preceding years. Investments included Uruguay's third largest
bank, the Banco de Credito; the Hotel Victoria Plaza in Montevideo; and the
newspaper, Ultimas Noticias. Moon's venture were aided by
generous tax breaks from Uruguay's military government. "Church officials
said Uruguay was especially attractive because of liberal laws that allow
easy repatriation of profits abroad," the Times reported.
[NYT, 2-16-84]
Supporting the Nicaraguan contra rebels, Moon's organization developed
close ties, too, with the powerful Honduran military which gave the
contras base camps along the Nicaraguan border. Again, Moon's
representatives were in contact with officers suspected of supporting the
shipment of cocaine into the United States. Anti-Castro Cubans linked to
the Miami drug networks also appeared on the scene to advance the
anti-communist cause as did intelligence officers from the Argentine
military.
The Honduran Connection
Kerry's Senate report concluded that Honduras became an important way
station for cocaine shipments heading north. "Elements of the Honduran
military were involved ... in the protection of drug traffickers from 1980
on," the report stated. "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]
In the mid-1980s, when journalists and congressional investigators began
probing the evidence of contra-connected drug trafficking, they encountered
harsh attacks from Moon's Washington Times. An Associated Press
story that I co-wrote with Brian Barger was denounced on the Times'
front page as a "political ploy." [April 11, 1986]
The Times attacked Kerry's investigators first for wasting money
[Aug. 13, 1986] and then with obstructing justice [Jan. 21, 1987]. Now,
with a clearer picture of Moon's historic ties to drug-tainted officials in
South America, the harassment of these investigations takes on a different
appearance, of possible self-protection. [See our "Dark Side of Rev. Moon"
series for more details.]
More recently, Moon has shifted his base of operation to a luxurious estate
in Uruguay and continued to expand his South American holdings. He has
invested heavily in the Argentine province of Corrientes, a border area
near Paraguay that is known as a major smuggling center.
In a sermon to his followers on Jan. 2, 1996, Moon announced plans to begin
building small airstrips in remote areas of South America as well as bases
for submarines to evade Coast Guard patrols. Saying the airfield project
would be for tourism, he added that "in the near future, we will have many
small airports throughout the world." The submarines, he said, were needed
because "there are so many restrictions due to national boundaries
worldwide."
With his history 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. ~
(c) Copyright 1997
Return to Moon Series
Index
Return to Main Archive
Index
Return to Consortium
Main Menu.