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- Oliver North
This man
was the Jack of all Trades, and a go between for many men and
organizations. He was associated, through Maj. Gen. Richard Secord, to
the Air Commando Association, which was also involved in Honduras and
Nicaragua, as well as AmeriCares. North was associated with operation
Phoenix, which was an assassination group operating widely in the
1970s, and it was responsible for the death of thousands of Vietnamese
civilians. He was associated with Western Goals, and Moon's heritage
foundation. North has been associated with several of Moon's
organizations, such as CAUSA, CERT, The Nicaraguan Freedom Fund, and
other branches of Moon's Unification Church. He has been actively
involved with Beverly LaHaye's Concerned Women of America, Pat
Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network, Full Gospel Businessmen's
Fellowship, and was a member of Tim LaHaye's Council for National
Policy.
Jeane Kirkpatrick
- U.S. Diplomatic Rep. to the United Nations.
Kirkpatrick was a chairman for Moon's Nicaraguan Freedom Fund. She has
been a director of the Council of Foreign Relations, (a force pushing
the world into its New Order, many of which are Bilderbergers), and
has been an honored speaker for Lahaye's CNP.
William
Simon
- Member of the Knights of Malta, Secretary of
Treasury under President Nixon, and Chairman of Rev. Moon's Nicaraguan
Freedom Fund(NFF). Simon was international business counselor for the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, and connected with
Moon's Heritage Foundation, and the American Enterprise Institute.
Simon was a board member of AmeriCares, and also in Lahaye's Council
of National Policy.
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- Robert Warren
- U.S. Naval Counterinsurgency expert, head of CBN's
Operation Blessing while they were running flights into Nicaragua and
Honduras.
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- Zbigniew Brzezinski
- President Carters National Security Adviser, and
oversaw U.S. Covert ops in Afghanistan. He was also honorary Chairman
of Americares, which was also associated in their work with Pat
Robertson's Operation Blessing, and Moon's NFF.
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- Maj. General John K. Singlaub
- Formerly of the OSS (forerunner of the CIA), Former
Deputy Chief CIA in Korea (Moon's homeland), and also at the Chinese
desk of the CIA(2), Head of the Joint Unconventional Warfare Task
Force(1), and was with the American Security council. Singlaub denies
association with Operation Phoenix, though his Task Force was in
charge of it. Operation Phoenix was an assassination organization that
was responsible for the death of many thousands of Vietnamese
civilians.(1), Chief of Staff of the U.N. Command in Korea, forced to
retire under Jimmy Carter.(1) He founded the U.S. Council of World
Freedom, which is very tightly associated with Rev. Moon's World
Anti-Communist League. His Council has been a breeding ground for
Moon's WACL organization.(1) He met repeatedly with William Casey of
the CIA, Elliot Abrams of the State Department, and Oliver North of
the NSC between 1980 and 1986, all of which were involved in the
"drugs for guns" debacle in Honduras and Nicaragua.(4) He was head of
the USCWF, Chairman of Moon's WACL (World Anti-Communist League),
Refugee Relief International, board member of Tim Lahaye's Council of
National Policy (Singlaub raised at least $100,000 for Moon's WACL
from Tim Lahaye's CNP group during just 1 fundraiser (3). Singlaub has
been with Western Goals (a group dedicated to surveillance of American
"subversives"), and the British arm of Western Goals(4).
-
- In an interview for CBSs' "60 Minutes" Mike Wallace
asked him, "Singlaub has become Ronald Reagan's secret weapon to
sidestep a congress that will not permit him to act in the areas where
he believes that our (national) security interests are at stake.True?"
Singlaub responded "True"(14). His association with these groups were
to effect the toppling and restructuring of governments. He did this
largely through LaHaye's CNP and the Council of 56 Religious
Roundtable. He has admitted that the Defense Department organized the
private aid (1), which largely included Moon's NFF, WACL, Heritage
Foundation, And Tim LaHaye's CNP and The Religious
Roundtable.
-
- The following are a few short bios of the
evangelicals sitting on these same various boards, and councils, with
a list of the various councils to whom they belong.
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- Tim LaHaye
- Co-author of the Left Behind book series, which
depicts a person as being saved even after receiving the mark of the
beast. Thinking this to be a fluke, in a conversation with his
co-author Jerry Jenkins at the official left behind website in their
message board section, we were told their position is that it will be
ok to receive the mark of the beast as long as the recipient of the
mark is not a worshiper of the beast. These men are influencing
millions, and now no doubt countless thousands are embracing this
doctrine as scripturally sound. Are they preparing the church to
receive the mark of the beast? It would certainly seem so. I have
asked Tim LaHaye several questions recently concerning his
relationship with the Rev. Moon and the intelligence community. At
first he denied sitting on any board with men associated with the Rev
Moon, but when faced with evidence showing this to be untrue he now
remains silent.
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- LaHaye is a central figure in marrying evangelical
churches with the Rev. Moon and the intelligence community.
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- He was a principal in the American Freedom
coalition, which was a Moon sponsored group, and claimed by Moon as an
arm of his network. He was also associated with the Coalition on
Revival, and the Heritage foundation, both of which were also Moon
sponsored. After this association was made public, he resigned from
the AFC, (though his name was not removed when he resigned), and tried
to distance himself from Moon in the public eye. He was also a
principal in the Coalition of Religious Freedom, where he spoke out
for Moon during Moon's incarceration for tax fraud, asking hundreds of
evangelicals to go to prison to support Moon if allowed by
authorities. He was also on the original board of directors of
Falwell's Moral Majority, which was also tied through its members to
the intelligence community, and Ren Moon's Unification Church. LaHaye
also founded the American Coalition of Traditional Values, which was
touted as a Christian organization, but was extra-ripe with Moon
organization board members, and the intelligence community. He then
went on to found what was his hallmark organization, The Council for
National Policy. This was an infamous moment for LaHaye as the most
powerful intelligence and National Security community members were
melded with the church, and it was literally filled with evangelical
leaders who sit in organizations sponsored and founded by Moon. This
Council went on for the next 2 decades to both work affecting national
policy as well as movements within the protestant denominations,
affecting nearly every evangelical church directly or indirectly. This
coalition has even been involved with Oliver North, who was a member
of CNP, and his CIA sponsored Central American mission of covertly
toppling governments and then restructuring them (3). LaHaye has also
been with the Council of 56 Religious Roundtable, which is another
cover organization grouping together Moon's representatives and the
U.S. intelligence community. LaHaye is, at my last finding, also a
member of the National Religious Broadcasters which is filled with
evangelical leaders tied in with Moon and U.S intelligence.
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-
- Ron Godwin
- Former Vice President of Jerry Falwell's Moral
Majority, Sr. Vice President of the Moon owned Washington Times and
honored member of LaHaye's CNP.
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- Robert Grant
- Founder of "Christian Voice", and the American
Freedom Coalition, both of which are Moon sponsored orgs. Graduate of
the Fuller Theological Seminary and member of the Religious
Roundtable. Grant's "Christian Voice", sponsored by Moon's Bo Hi Pak,
"formerly" CIA, claims to be the nations largest Christian lobby, and
according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, merged with Moon in 1987. He
was also associated with the Heritage foundation, a supporter of Rev.
Moon's Unification Church, and a member of the Board of Governors for
Tim Lahaye's CNP (15).
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- Jerry Falwell
- Falwell admits that he accepted 2.5 million dollars
from Moon in 1994 in order to bail out his Liberty University in
Richmond, Virginia. The Women's Federation for World Peace paid 3.5
million to the Christian Heritage Foundation, which in turn bought
Falwell's $73 million debt, and then wrote it off. Falwell has spoken
at many of Moon's functions, embracing the cult-leader with unabashed
reverence and friendship, calling him, "An unsung hero to the cause of
freedom, who is to be commended for his determination and courage and
endurance in support of his beliefs." (16)
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- Falwell took over Jim Bakker's "Heritage USA"
Christian theme-park/retirement community/tourist extravaganza when
Bakker was indicted and incarcerated. He was with the Moon associated
Coalition for Religious Freedom, and the Leader of the Moral Majority,
which held high level Moon associates. Falwell was also a board member
of the Council of 56 Religious Roundtable, and also a member of Tim
Lahaye's CNP.
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- Paul Crouch
- President of Trinity Broadcasting Network. Paul
Crouch has been often ridiculed for some of the doctrine he allows on
TBN. He promotes Benny Hinn, who has been caught in countless false
prophecies, even exclaiming that Jesus will appear physically on stage
at one of his crusades. Crouch promotes Kenneth Copeland who has
publicly stated on TBN that God is the biggest failure in the universe
("I was shocked when I found out who the biggest failure in the Bible
actually is....The biggest one in the whole bible is God....I mean, He
lost His top-ranking, most anointed angel; the first man He ever
created; the first woman He ever created; the whole earth and all the
Fullness therein; a third of the angels, at least--that's a big loss,
man." Kenneth Copeland, Praise-a-Thon program on TBN [April 1988]
"Christianity in Crisis"---Hank Hanegraff, Harvest House, 1993). When
many have spoken out about these affronts to scripture and the church,
Crouch expressed his wishes they be damned to Hell for causing
division, and broadcasted it worldwide.
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- After it became public knowledge that Rev. Moon was
sponsoring the American Freedom Coalition, Paul Crouch joined up,
along with Rex Humbard and Hal Lindsey, giving Moon even more
respectability among evangelical ministers. Jim Bakker helped Crouch
to start his TBN empire(17). Crouch is a member of the Council of 56,
Religious Roundtable, which again is loaded with Moon representatives,
and U.S. intelligence personnel, and he is a member of the National
Religious Broadcasters, also loaded with Moon cronies.
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- Gary Bauer
- A Baptist evangelical, Bauer has also been a
presidential candidate. He has served with the Family Research Council
with Alan Keyes, and served with Falwell, Jack Kemp, and Ralph Reed in
the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. In 1987 when the
Religious Roundtable sponsored a rally in support of Oliver North
during his troubles for trading guns and drugs, Ralph Reed was the
featured speaker.
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- Pat Robertson
- Pat gave Jim Bakker his start in the early days of
CBN. Joseph Coors has been a financier of CBN, giving very large sums
of money. He has been a part of Falwell's Moral Majority, he is a
member of the Religious Roundtable, and a principal of Tim LaHaye's
CNP. He claims to be a good friend of Oliver North and has helped
raise funds for the NFF which was Moon sponsored to help Ollie in
Nicaragua. Operation Blessing helped AmeriCares in Central America,
and there is evidence that they shipped more than "relief goods", and
was actually a cover for CIA activity. (This will be discussed
somewhat in the next section of this article, and in depth in part
4.)
All very colorful men indeed, and not the sort
to waste their time playing tiddly-winks to pass the time away. We can
know of a surety that men of this caliber indeed have an agenda for
every activity or group they involve themselves in. What is their
agenda? A quick look at some of the activities in the groups they are
involved with and the way they have spun their web, may shed much
light to show us that, without a doubt, they have been for decades
shaping the world to suit them. They are indeed bringing in the NWO
from their powerful positions in the worlds most powerful nation,
Mystery Babylon, and with the most powerful of the leaders of the
Laodicean** church.
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- The Most Powerful Covert Operations In The
World
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- The following is a downplayed exposé on
organizations involving Moon, evangelical leaders and the U.S.
Intelligence community Many parts are ver batem from Group Watch at http:www.pir.org. (A link to the over
100 sources in this article can be found at the end of the
article.)
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- Air Commando Association
Members of the ACA have included the following retired military
special forces personnel: Major General John Singlaub, MajorGeneral
Sam Wilson, Lt. General Manor, Major General Jim Ahmann, William
Keeler, and Major General Richard Secord.
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- Most members of the ACA were involved in covert
operations in Laos, Cambodia, and South Vietnam, including Aderholt
who served as Chief of Covert Air operations in Southeast Asia under
General John Singlaub. (1, 2)
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- Funding for the ACA comes primarily from member
donations.(3) The supplies and equipment the group delivers are
donated by other organizations such as World Medical Relief and
Operation Blessing of the Christian Broadcasting Network. (4)
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- In 1984 the ACA began to deliver supplies in El
Salvador. Irene Auberlin, the founder and chairman of World Medical
Relief (WMR), pledged $20 million of WMR supplies for ACA's relief
work in El Salvador. (1) According to author Russ Bellant, over the
past 30 years WMR has provided over $100 million in supplies to
CIA-directed counter-insurgency programs. (5)
- The Michigan Air Guard packed up supplies, the Air
Force provided storage facilities, and Special Operations Air Force
personnel helped transport several tons of supplies to Guatemala for
ACA. (1) The U.S. embassy in Guatemala provided ACA with a postal box,
and according to one ACA member, "watched over" the group. (4) The
operations of the ACA and other paramilitary groups operating in
Central America reportedly coordinated their efforts through Oliver
North on the National Security Council.(6)
AmeriCares
Foundation
- Robert McCauley (founder, chair), Zbigniew
Brzezinski(honorary chair), Peter L. Keating (exec vice pres) Bert
Schwarz (vice pres), William S. Post(comptroller), Leila McCauley
(sec). Advisory Committee: J. Peter Grace (chair; chair, W.R. Grace
&Co.), Louis F. Bantle (chair UST), Prescott S. Bush, Jr.
(Prescott Bush & Co. Inc, brother to Vice President George
Bush), Sol M.Linowitz (Coudert Brothers), William E. Simon (Treasury
Secretary under Richard Nixon), Gen. Richard G. Stilwell (USA
ret.).(1)
AmeriCares is a high profile organization. Often a
prominent political figure in the 1980s, frequently a member of the
Bush family, was on board to deliver the shipment, and the U.S.
ambassador to the recipient nation was at the airport to receive the
delivery. (2) Of course Bush Sr. was a leader of the Council of
Foreign Relations, working toward bringing in the NWO under the guise
of a mild mannered Christian. He was also the ex-director of the CIA,
and who better to trust than his family to oversee his and their
agenda? The activities of AmeriCares appear to echo U.S. foreign
policy, so much so that investigative reporter Russ Baker wrote that
"AmeriCares resembles a private foreign-policy operation of the U.S.
government."(2)
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- The organization received significant contributions
from the Moon founded Nicaraguan Freedom Fund (NFF) during its brief
existence. Hal Eberle, a board member of the NFF, was quoted in the
New York Times as saying the Nicaraguan Freedom Fund contributed
$300,000 to Americares. (3, 4) The Nicaraguan Freedom Fund's 990 tax
return shows the contribution to AmeriCares to be $165,648.
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- In l985 and l986, AmeriCares shipped more than
$l00,000 worth of "newsprint" to the opposition daily, La Prensa, in
Managua, Nicaragua. This included delivery of 200 tons of newsprint to
the newspaper in l986. (5, 6) Of course we can see the need to send a
member of the Bush family, and involve the U.S. Diplomat delivering
such volatile material as "newsprint". It is no wonder that this was
seen as a national security matter.
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- The Knights of Malta handled the local arrangements
in Nicaragua. (7) It's l985 tax return indicated that AmeriCares
delivered $73,136 worth of food and medical supplies to La Prensa, but
Jim Schaffer, a former official in the organization, says that only
newsprint was sent. (6) An attempted shipment of another l5 tons of
"newsprint" from AmeriCares to La Prensa in April l988 was blocked by
the Sandinista government which accused AmeriCares of being a CIA
front and part of the secret network of private groups used by Lt.
Col. Oliver North to deliver aid to the Contras. (5) The Sandinista
claim they received corroboration from the organization's own tax
records which indicate that AmeriCares is financially linked to a
number of other individuals and organizations that supplied the
Contras or were working with the CIA in Central America.
(6)
Christian Broadcasting Network CBN University:
Pat Robertson, chancellor; Board of Regents in 1986 included: Mrs.
Joseph (Holly) Coors, Major General Curry, and Mrs. Roger W. (Dee)
Jepsen; Board of Trustees in 1986 included Joseph Coors. (1, 2, 3)
Daniel Olson is the Manager of international marketing and mission.
(4) Michael Little is a CBN vice president. Robert Warren, a retired
U.S. Navy counterinsurgency expert, is head of Operation Blessing. (5)
The Coors Foundation was an early supporter of CBN, giving $30,000 in
support of CBN University. (6)
Robertson, according to
investigative reporter Sara Diamond, used his tax-exempt broadcast
license to hold a fundraising telethon in the United States for the
Guatemalan military and the Nicaraguan Contras. (7) On The 700 Club,
Robertson has interviewed Adolfo Calero and Steadman Fagoth, contra
leaders; Efrain Rios Montt, then-president of Guatemala known for
massive human rights abuses; Jeremias Chitunda, an Angolan guerrilla
leader; and Ray Cline, former CIA deputy director of intelligence.
Robertson praised death squad leader Roberto D'Aubuisson, of the ARENA
party, as a "very nice fellow". (8)
While Robertson was
campaigning for President, his wife Dede said, "He is not a television
evangelist. He has never been an evangelist. He is a television
broadcaster. He has a law degree. He's a businessman. He has a
multi-million dollar business that he started with $70. " (9) This
seems to be true in light of the fact that his "Family Chapel" was
built with the money sent in from supporters of the gospel, and then
sold for 250 million dollars, which of course was never sent back to
the supporters of CBN.
CBN is spearheaded a grassroots movement
called Christian Coalition; "a house united". Headquartered at CBN
offices in Virginia, the coalition includes Christian stalwarts such
as Beverly LaHaye, Rev. D. James Kennedy, both of whom are associated
with Moon through his organizations, and organizations filled with his
associates, as well as the U.S. intelligence community. (10)
In
May 1985, CBN/Operation Blessing announced a $20 million relief
campaign to send "humanitarian" supplies--food and medicine--to
Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. This joint CBN and AmeriCares
effort brought supplies "of a strictly humanitarian nature" to
refugees and displaced people. AmeriCares gathered the contributions
of medicines, pharmaceutical supplies, and nutritional supplements,and
CBN provided $2 million cash for shipping and handling. [Quotes in
original AP story]. (11, 12)
Several tons of the AmeriCares/CBN
supplies were also transported to Guatemala and the Honduran Mosquitia
region on U.S. Navy ships in the Navy's humanitarian aid program
called "Operation Handclasp." (13) Some of the aid was to be
distributed through Operation Blessing units in Central America, and
also by Knights of Malta. While en route to Honduras in a C-130 full
of medical supplies, Robertson told a reporter in Miami that "some [of
this aid] may get to the Contras." (11)
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- According to Hap Lutz, Air Commando Association
(ACA) vice president, Operation Blessing gave about $2 million to the
ACA. (14)
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- The U.S. operation of CBN was considered one of the
top private funders of the Nicaraguan contras. (11, 15) As of 1987
Robertson reported that Operation Blessing had sent more than $3
million in aid to the Nicaraguan refugees. (16) CBN gave the $3
million to the contra's Houston-based Nicaraguan Patriotic
Association, according to Juan Sacasas, Vice President of the group
and representative of the FDN contra force. (13, 14) Robertson denies
any connection with Sacasas. (14, 17) However, there is little
question that the Operation Blessing donations reached the contra
forces. Robertson was so popular among them that one group named
itself the "Pat Robertson Brigade." (16) In May, 1984, Pat Robertson
solicited U.S. viewers' contributions for the "freedom fighters"
through a special telethon on The 700Club and simulated mailgrams.
(15) An undetermined amount of CBN aid was delivered to Miskito
Indians on the Honduras-Nicaragua border by AmeriCares/Knights of
Malta and the Friends of the Americas (FOA). (14, 13) Louisiana State
Representative Louis "Woody" Jenkins (Chairman of FOA) told The New
York Times that "some of the aid...would go to the refugees and some
to the rebels." (18) Jenkins said in 1985, "I'm all for the freedom
fighters. I want the Sandinistas kicked out of Nicaragua. That's one
of the main motivations of my work." (13) At a National Religious
Broadcasters dinner, Jenkins told the audience, "One of the few groups
helping [the refugees through Friends of the Americas] is Pat
Robertson and CBN." Addressing Robertson seated at the head table,
Jenkins said, "Thank you." (13) Diane Jenkins, the representative's
wife and Executive Director of FOA, has solicited funds on The 700
Club for the FOA's work on the Nicaraguan border. (19)
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- Robertson visited contra training camps in Honduras
in June 1985, where he met with top leaders of the FDN and was saluted
as a guest of honor. (20) When allegations of contra-CBN connections
arose in the United States, CBN gave a statement to WCFC-TV, which
airs The 700 Club in Chicago, saying in part: "CBN is helping starving
and displaced persons in 15 countries, including some in Central
America. The help is absolutely non-political. Articles claiming
support by CBN of the Contras in Nicaragua are incorrect", despite the
mountains of evidence to the contrary. (2) At a political fund-raiser
in Chicago, Pat Robertson was asked about CBN's support for the
Contras. He refused to answer directly, but said, "The fact is that
the communists make people suffer. If that makes it [Operation
Blessing] political, then, I'm sorry, we're still going to help them."
(17) A refugee worker said that in 1985, a CBN film team came to a
World Relief refugee camp asking for gasoline. "I told them I would
give them the fuel, but not if their vehicle belonged to the Contras.
They said it didn't. But when they came back a few days later, they
admitted they had lied. The jeep belonged to Misura [contra forces].
CBN went down to do a story on freedom fighters. They weren't
interested in refugees."(13)
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- In April 1989 Pat Robertson visited Managua to open
the Nicaraguan chapter of CBN's 700 Club. Robertson's first stop was
the U.S. embassy.
Joseph Coors, (Coors Brewing Co.) wrote to Al
Weinrub in the Labor Report on Central America, "has used the power of
the Coors financial dynasty not only to provide support to the
Contras, but to set a right wing political agenda in the U.S...." (21)
Coors who serves on the CBN University board of Trustees, is a funder
and co-founder along with Paul Weyrich of the Heritage Foundation,
which again is a Moon funded organization, filled with Moon
representatives and U.S. intelligence.
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- Coors supported Lt. Gen. John Singlaub's U.S.
Council for World Freedom (USCWF), a Moon associated organization, the
U.S. chapter of the World Anti-Communist League (WACL), a Moon founded
organization. USCWF and the Nicaraguan Refugee Fund (another Coor's
cause) helped fund the Nicaraguan Contras. (22) He was on the advisory
council of the National Strategy Information Center, a rightwing think
tank for military strategy, and a member of the secretive Council for
National Policy, founded by Tim LaHaye. His wife Holly was on the CBN
University Board of Regents.
CBN is a member of The Religious
Roundtable, a coalition of business, military, political, and
religious leaders working together to bring Biblical principles into
public policy.(3)
Heritage Foundation A Moon funded
group through Bo Hi Pak. Principals have included William Simon,
Joseph Coors, and trustees have included Former Atty. Gen. Ed Meese.
Both Jack Kemp and Tim LaHaye have also been part of this
group.
The New York Times in a November 17, 1985 article called
it an "aggressively conservative" organization that has achieved
success through a blend of political advocacy, public relations and
job placement services. (1) Alan Crawford in Thunderon the Right said
of Heritage, "It is unusual for a research institution to have a
'staff ideology'... [The] founder's real interest...appears to be less
with balanced public policy research and more with the provision of
support for New Right opinions." Or NWO, Moon, Evangelical, U.S.
Intelligence opinion. (2) Its analysts study a wide range of military,
foreign policy, economic,and domestic issues and produce position
papers that have reached the top echelons of government, especially in
the Reagan Administration. The New Republic said that the Heritage
Foundation was "the most important think-tank in the nation's
capital." (1)
- Although the Heritage Foundation has offices only in
the U.S., it produces policy papers that have had tremendous impact on
Washington's policies and actions in Central America, the Philippines,
Africa and Asia. The foundation's policy and position papers reach a
wide international market.
- The foundation received $2.2 million from the
Federation of Korean Industries in the early 1980s. Initially it was
believed this donation came from the Korean Central Intelligence
Agency (which would make the Heritage Foundation a foreign agent of
Korea, also remember that Bo Hi Pak was Korean CIA and liaison to
American CIA, which makes it an agent of the intelligence community),
but the Federation later stated that the donation came at the
encouragement of the KCIA.(3)
- In addition to generating numerous conservative
policy suggestions, Heritage Foundation is a very successful
public-relations operation. Heritage's senior vice president Burton
Yale Pines was a former associate editor of Time magazine and a former
journalist. In addition to its own numerous publications, Heritage
articles appear frequently in The Wall Street Journal, the New York
Times, and Newsweek, and are aired on national television news. (4)
Considering Moon owns the Washington Times, and UPI, this pretty much
ties up the media to put forth his propaganda and that of the
intelligence community which are ties in with the evangelical
groups.
- Ed Meese was quoted as saying that "the Reagan
Administration will rely heavily on the Heritage Foundation." (5) The
Heritage foundation called for a $35 billion increase in defense
spending, using food aid as a foreign policy weapon, during the Reagan
Administration.
- Another Heritage Foundation suggestion implemented
by the Reagan administration was an unprecedented build-up of the
Pentagon's Special Operations Forces (SOF). SOF specialize in the
covert operations of Low Intensity Conflict warfare.
- Funding for SOF tripled between 1981 and 1986.
(6)
Mandate for Leadership II set the tone for Reagan's second
term. In keeping with the mission statement of the foundation, it
recommended privatization of social security, the federal highway
system, Amtrak, and the postal service; elimination of special
educational funding for the handicapped (because it drained funding
from "normal students" and deregulation of trucking and other
regulated industries. (7) It also recommended the government use
"low-intensity" warfare to eliminate communist threats in nine nations
around the globe. (8) As you can see from that time to now, this has
been pursued to the letter, meaning Moon and the intelligence
community, have influenced our national policy, and with the help of
major evangelists, are sinking us ever deeper into their world
order.
Mandate for Leadership III, the right's agenda for the
1990s which focused on management of the federal bureaucracy, was
given to the George Bush Sr. Administration. (9)
- Heritage representatives attended meetings of the
militaristic, rightwing American Security Council's Tuesday Group.
Other attendees included Lt. Col. Oliver North, then a top aide on the
National Security Council (NSC), and representatives from the
Pentagon, State Department, Lynn Bouchey of the Council for
Inter-American Security, former ambassador to Costa Rica Curtin
Winsor, Jr, and Constantine Menges, former head of Latin American
affairs at the NSC. (10) Heritage has further connections to the
American Security Council (ASC), through Roger Pearson.
(10)
Heritage Foundation was responsible for "U.S. Policy and
the Marxist Threat to Central America," by ex-CIA officer Cleto Di
Giovanni, which provided the Reagan Administration with its blueprint
for U.S. Central American policy, particularly in Nicaragua. (11) It
called for a return to the "domino theory," claimed communism to be
the common threat to Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador, and called
for support of the traditional church, the private sector, unions, and
former Nicaraguan national guardsmen in exile. (12) It recommended
continued support of all types to the anticommunist military and
governmental factions in El Salvador and Guatemala and muting human
rights criticisms of those countries. (11) A second Heritage
Foundation recommendation was to conduct a policy of economic warfare
against the Sandinista government of Nicaragua. The policy laid out
the course followed by the Reagan administration--a U.S.-financed
contra opposition and pressure on the international community to cut
off trade, loans, and credit. (13) In June 1985, Lewis Lehrman
arranged for a meeting to take place at the Heritage Foundation
between Nicaraguan contra leader Adolfo Calero, Angolan rebel leader
Jonas Savimbi, and leaders of other international "freedom fighting"
groups. (14)
- President Reagan's transition team included more
than a dozen Heritage Foundation employees, and many others were hired
to fill important posts in the Executive Branch.(17) Then-Vice
President George Bush dedicated Heritage Foundation's new office
building in 1983. (15) The late CIA director William Casey was among
the initial supporters of the foundation. (16)
- The crossovers between Heritage and the government
probably number in the hundreds. (18) The Heritage Foundation
publications include speeches and position papers of many conservative
legislators and members or former members of the executive branch.
(19)
- Heritage Foundation also had a close connection with
the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church through its former
Director of Administration, Michael Warder. Warder was a director of
the Unification Church in the United States in 1977. Warder was also
secretary of the International Cultural Foundation, an umbrella
organization coordinating a variety of Moon's projects. (8) Also the
financial ties between Heritage foundation and Moon are
many.
- Paul Weyrich, co-founder of Heritage has often
acknowledged that he does not intend to "conserve" anything. "We are
different from previous generations of conservatives," Weyrich
explained. "We are no longer working to preserve the status quo. We
are radicals, working to overturn the present power structure of the
country." (20)
American Coalition for Traditional
Values; (Last info 1989)
- Tim LaHaye founded the ACTV. Gary Jarmin, national
field director; William K. Lyons, exec dir, Family Life Seminars.
Executive board includes: Jerry Falwell, James Robison, Jimmy
Swaggart, Pat Robertson, RexHumbard, Colonel Doner. (1)
-
- According to "Separation of Church and State", Feb
2002, Tim LaHaye received $10,000 for ACTV from Bo Hi Pak, and then
agreed to sit on the boards of the Christian Voice, and the Coalition
of Religious Freedom. Both of these are Moon funded groups.
- Private Connections: Tim LaHaye is married to
Beverly LaHaye of Concerned Women for America (CWA). CWA had Lt. Col.
Oliver North (ret.) speak at their 1985 and 1986 conventions. (2, 3)
She also has spoken at Moon sponsored functions, where she received
between $80,000-$150,000 for her troubles. Herb Ellingwood, chair of
the Merit Systems Protection Board and a prominent conservative
evangelical, headed the job placement bank described above. (4) Gary
Jarmin is/was also legislative director of the fundamentalist lobby
Christian Voice. (5) ACTV and Christian Voice worked closely together,
and in l985 the two groups moved their bases of operations to
Washington D.C. to coordinate their activities. (1) ACTV was a member
of the RAMBO (Restore a More Benevolent Order) Coalition. (5) Tim
LaHaye has been active both in the Moral Majority and Christian Voice.
He helped to found the Council for National Policy, and has served as
its president (as did Pat Robertson). (6) The Council is an umbrella
group of conservative individuals which promotes a foreign policy
agenda reflecting their objectives. (11)
- American Freedom Coalition
The important members have included: Tim LaHaye, Paul
Crouch, Hal Lindsey, Rex Humbard, James Robinson, Dr D. James Kennedy,
Hon. Richard H. Ichord, chair; Robert G. Grant, pres; Dr. Ralph David
Abernathy, vice-pres. Richard Viguerie, secretary. National Policy
Board includes: Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham, Donald Sills, Religious Task
Force dir; Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub, Dan Fefferman, editor of
American Freedom Journal, Lt. Gen. Gordon Sumner (USA-ret.). (1, 2,
3)
Most all of these men have been shown to have strong ties
with Rev. Moon organizations and the intelligence
community.
- The American Freedom Coalition, or AFC, is a
political education and lobbying group which was founded in April
1987. Calling itself a "supra-coalition", the group claimed some
300,000 members in all 50 states by February 1988. (4, 6) The AFC
represents an attempt to unite political conservatives and
conservative religious groups and individuals behind a common
campaign. According to AFC president Robert Grant, the AFC was formed
because of the "inability of the 'Christian Right' to achieve its
agenda, because of its fragmentation and its failure to build
coalitions with its philosophical allies from other communities..."
(4) to preserve and promote what it describes as traditional
values.
- The AFC produces the American Freedom Journal, a
monthly newspaper. Among contributors to the Journal have been former
Reagan aide Patrick Buchanan, former Attorney General Ed Meese, the
American Enterprise Institute's Ben Wattenberg, and former U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick. (3)
The AFC
calls for support of "freedom fighters," in countries such as
Afghanistan, and Nicaragua. (5) In terms of U.S. foreign policy, the
AFC believes the United States should, in the words of Steven Trevino,
take the "lead for the Free World with regards to improving the human
condition." (7)
- At the leadership levels in both the national office
and state chapters, the American Freedom Coalition is closely tied to
the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. The Washington Post
(March 30, 1988) has even described the AFC as a "Moon-sponsored
lobbying group." (8)
- AFC President Robert Grant has said that he hoped to
"recruit a broad base" from his contacts with CAUSA, a political arm
of Rev. Moon's Unification Church. (4) Grant has said that he
solicited Phillip Sanchez, president of Moon's CAUSA USA, and Bo Hi
Pak (Moon's #1 man and Korean CIA and liaison to American CIA),
president of CAUSA Intl, for support for AFC. Sanchez and Pak agreed
to help AFC. The two CAUSA leaders also granted the services of
several CAUSA members to help in the Washington D.C. office of the
AFC.'(4) 'According to Grant, state AFC chapters are headed by the
state directors of the Moon funded lobby group "Christian Voice" and
the American Constitution Committee (ACC), a CAUSA project. (4) Grant,
founder and chairman of the evangelical lobby Christian Voice, said
the AFC has about 65 CAUSA/ACC employees across the United States.
Current and former members of the American Freedom Coalition have said
that the majority of AFC administrative officers, including the
executive director, administrative director, and publications
editor--are members of the Unification Church and have been principals
in CAUSAand ACC. (4) In a December 1987 Knight-Ridder article, Grant
said that Moon's CAUSA could veto AFC state board
members.(7)
- Among its most prominent activities have been its
fundraising efforts on behalf of former National Security Council
aide, Oliver North. One special project of the American Freedom
Coalition was its "Emergency Project to Support Colonel North's
Freedom Fight in Central America." The group put together a television
special on North entitled "Fight for Freedom." (8) It also hoped to
mobilize popular support for North's cause in order to create pressure
on President Reagan to pardon North. (8, 9) Between October 1987 and
April 1988, the group had purchased airtime in 180 television markets
to air its pro-North video. During that time it also collected some
600,000 signatures supporting North.(10) Perhaps they considered North
and his links too important to lose. At both the national and state
levels, the AFC has conducted campaigns to renew funding for the
Nicaraguan Contras. (11)
- Like Grant, Donald Sills is associated with the
Coalition for Religious Freedom. (8) Sills is president of the group.
Joseph Paige and Cleon Skousen are members of the Coalition's
executive committee. (12) The Coalition for Religious Freedom has
reportedly received $500,000 from Sun Myung Moon sources. (13) Eldon
Rudd, former Congressman from Arizona, is a fundamentalist and an
ex-FBI agent. (14) Rudd is also a member of the U.S. Council for World
Freedom (USCWF), as are John Singlaub, Daniel Graham,John
LeBoutillier, and J.A. Parker. The USCWF is the current U.S. chapter
of Rev. Moon's World Anti-Communist League. (15, 16) Singlaub is the
head of that organization, and Graham is its vice-chairman. Graham and
Singlaub have also been (and may still be) co-chairmen of the
Coalition for Peace through Strength, a project of the American
Security Council. (15, 16)
- The American Freedom Coalition has provided
financial and other assistance to the Nicaraguan contra-support work
of Rev. Moon's Christian Emergency Relief Team (CERT) International.
In one such effort, the AFC attempted to get television appearances on
morning talk shows for a Miskito Indian who worked with CERT. (17) The
AFC also gave money to Moon's CERT, an evangelical relief assistance
organization which has been taking over CAUSA's humanitarian aid work
in Honduras. (17, 18) In California, the AFC and Christian Voice
co-sponsor a monthly "California Leadership Forum." In South Carolina,
the Vietnam Institute and AFC jointly sponsored a benefit for Oliver
North. (19) The U.S. Global Strategy Council, headed by Steven
Trevino, has ties to the Unification Church and CAUSA through Arnaud
deBorchgrave and retired Gen. David Woellner. (16) De Borchgrave is
editor of the Washington Times, a newspaper owned by the Unification
Church. Woellner is (or was) president of CAUSA World Services.
(16)
- The Rev. Moon has said that he wants to form a
Christian political party that would encompass all religious groups.
(20) Members of the American Freedom Coalition like civil-rights
veterans Ralph Abernathy and James Bevel have become champions for
Moon and his followers. Abernathy, for instance, has compared
criticisms of Moon to injustices suffered by blacks in the United
States, this is a very sad affront to every African-American. An
affront to every American. An affront to every
Christian.
- Parts 1 and 2 of this series have already examined
the membership of the Religious Roundtable and Tim LaHaye's CNP, as
well as their ties with the Rev. Moon and the U.S. Intelligence
community. These 2 are the largest and most powerful as to these
connections and were a driving force as well in the toppling of
Central American Governments.
They seem to be a hub to these
other groups though in some cases they are relatively newer groups.
The men chairing the Roundtable and the CNP are the same men who head
the National Religious Broadcasters, and the several other groups we
have just examined which brought down Governments, allegedly operated
smuggling operations, were used as fronts for CIA infiltration, and
were responsible for helping to restructuring the governments of the
nations they helped to bring down.
This article has presented
facts to show the connections bringing in the NWO, by concentrating
solely upon Honduras and Nicaragua for the sake of brevity, but be
aware that their tentacles have reached much further.
They have
been involved to the same extent, and in the same ways, Guatemala, El
Salvador, Afghanistan, The Soviet Block before and after its fall,
Ethiopia, and nearly every other nation whose Government has fallen in
the last 20 years.
If anyone has firsthand information
concerning the involvement of these groups in the areas discussed in
this 3rd part of the Unholy Alliance please email me at sum14hizwrd@tcworks.net
- Notes & References:
-
- ** Laodicea/
Revelation 3:14
And unto the angel of the church of the
Laodiceans write; These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true
witness, the beginning of the creation of God; 15 I know thy works,
that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. 16
So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will
spue thee out of my mouth. 17 Because thou sayest, I am rich, and
increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that
thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked: 18 I
counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be
rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the
shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with
eyesalve, that thou mayest see. 19 As many as I love, I rebuke and
chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent. 20 Behold, I stand at the
door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will
come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. 21 To him that
overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also
overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne. 22 He that
hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches.
-
-
- 1. Scott Anderson, Jon Lee Anderson, Inside the
League: The Shocking Expose of How Terrorists, Nazis, and Latin
American Death Squads Have Infiltrated the WACL. NYNY: Dodd, Mead and
Co. 1986
-
- 2. Village Voice, Oct 22, 1985, Joe Connosen, Murray
Waas
-
- 3. Peter Stone, "Private Groups Step up Aid",
Washington Post
-
- 4. Group Watch, USCWF
-
- 5. Release of membership names by the C.N.P.
1998
-
- 6.Shirley Christian "Nicaraguan Rebels Reported to
Raise up yo $25 Million," N.Y. Times Aug 13, 1985
-
- 7. Elton Magazine, "The Private Spy Agency", The
National Reporter, summer 1985
-
- 8. "Conservative Think Tank Moves in to Capitol
Spotlight", L.A. Times, Part 1-A, Dec 21, 1980
-
- 9. Charles Rammelkamp, "Coors Moves to End Boycott",
Coming Up!, Feb 1983.
-
- 8. Matin A. Lee, "Who Are the Knights of Malta?",
National Catholic Reporter, Oct 11, 1983.
-
- 9. Julia Preston, "Nicaragua Cuts off American
Airlift of Paper to La Prensa", Washington Post, April 14,
1988.
-
- 10. Private Organizations With U.S. Connections in
Hondouras, The Research Center, 1988.
-
- 11. John Spicer Nichols, "La Prensa: The CIA
Connection", Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 1988.
-
- 12. Russ Baker, "A Thousand Points of Light,
Americares, George Bushes Favorite Charity, Dispenses Bitter Medicine
Around the World", Villaga Voice, Jan. 8, 1991
-
- 13. Interview with Julio Cesar De LeonS., January
1987.
-
- 14. Copy of CBS 60 minutes, CBS television Oct 5,
1986
-
- 15. Council for National Policy, board of governors
mailing list, 1984
-
- 16. Christianity Today Magazine Christianity Today,
February 9, 1998 'Moon-Related Funds Filter to Evangelicals' by John
W. Kennedy
-
- 17. "Power, Glory, and Politics", Time, Feb. 17,
1986
-
-
- Air Commandos Assoc
-
- 1. "Air Commandos", Susanna Mckean Moore, The
Nation, Nov 2, 1985
-
- 2. Wayne King, N.Y. Times, Oct 12, 1986, "Private
Role Increasing in Foreign Actions"
-
- 3. Air Commando Association, Newsletter, May
1985
-
- 4. Air Commando Association Newsletter, Aug.
1984
-
- 5. Russ Bellant, "The Politics of Giving", Metro
Times, Detroit, Oct 9, 1985
-
- 6. Jonathan Marshall, Peter Dale Scott, and Jane
Hunter, The Iran-Contra
- Connection (Boston, MA: South End Press,
1987)
-
-
- Americares
- 1. Letter from Terry Tarnowski, AmeriCares, Feb 26,
1990.
-
- 2. Russ Bakert; A Thousand Points of Blight,
AmeriCares, George Bush's
-
- Favorite Charity, Dispenses Bitter Medicine Around
the World; Village Voice, Jan 8, 1991.
-
- 3. Nicaraguan Freedom Fund, 990 Income Tax Report,
1985.
-
- 4.Shirley Christian, Nicaraguan Rebels Reported to
Raise Up to $25
- Million", New York Times, Aug 13, 1985
-
- 5. Julia Preston, "Nicaragua Cuts Off American
Airlift of Paper to La
- Prensa," Washington Post, Apr l4, l988.
-
- 6. John Spicer Nichols, "La Prensa: The CIA
Connection," Columbia
- Journalism Review, July/August l988.
-
- 7.John Spicer Nichols, "U.S. Government Funding of
La Prensa," a
- paper presented to the XIV International Congress of
Latin American Studies
- Association, New Orleans, Mar 17, 1988.
-
-
- Christian Broadcasting Network
-
- 1. John J. Fiaka and Ellen Hume, "TV Preacher,
Possibly Eyeing the
- Presidency, Is Polishing His Image," The Wall Street
Journal, October
- 17, 1985.
-
- 2. Jeff Gerth, "Tax Data of Pat Robertson Groups Are
Questioned," New York
- Times, December 10, 1986.
-
- 3. Larry Kickham, "The Theology of Nuclear War,"
sidebar on The Full
- Gospel Business Men's Fellowship International,
Covert Action Information
- Bulletin, No. 27, Spring 1987, p. 15.
-
- 4. Jim Castelli, "CBN Launches 'Blitz' in Central
America," National Catholic Reporter, Feb 9, 1990.
-
- 5. Paul Jeffery, "Popcorn for the Poor,"
Christianity and Crisis, Sep 24, 1990.
-
- 6. Foundation Grants Index, 15th edition,
1986.
-
- 7. Sara Diamond, "Christian Right Stronger Than Ever
in the 1990s," Pacific News Service, week of May 22, 1989.
-
- 8.Sara Diamond, "Right Wing's Televangelists
Manipulate U.S. on Contra Aid and Apartheid," Sequoia,
September/October 1986.
-
- 9. In These Times, "Hawking the Faith", April 15-21,
1987, p. 5.
-
- 10. Group Research Report, Vol 29, No 1, Jan/Feb
1990.
-
- 11. Associated Press, "Christian Network Plans
Relief for Latin America," Washington Post, May 9, 1985.
-
- 12. Adon Taft, "TV Evangelist Defends Aid to
Nicaragua," Miami Herald, June 14, 1985.
-
- 13. Vicki Kemper, "In the Name of Relief,"
Sojourners, October, 1985.
-
- 14. Synapses Press Release, April 13, 1985.
-
- 15. Sara Diamond, "Pat Robertson's Central America
Connection," Guardian, September 17, 1986.
-
- 16. Michael D'Antonio, "The Christian Right Abroad,"
Alicia Patterson Foundation, Reporter, Fall 1987.
-
- 17. Synapses Press Release, June 27, 1985
-
- 18. New York Times, April 6, 1985.
-
- 19. Air Commando Association Newsletters, dated
August 1984, February 1985, and
- May 1985.
-
- 20. Sara Diamond, "Right Wing's Televangelists
Manipulate U.S. on Contra Aid and Apartheid, Sequoia,
September/October 1986.
-
- 21. Al Weinrub, "Coors Brews More Than Beer," Labor
Report on Central America, Sep/Oct 1985.
-
- 22. New Right Humanitarians (Albuquerque, NM: The
Resource Center, 1986).
-
- 23. Special Operations in U.S. Strategy, National
Strategy Information Center, 1984.
-
|