Unification Press International?
Rev. Moon Adds United Press International To His Media Empire

 By Bill Berkowitz

A little more than eight years ago, Rev. Pat Robertson was closing in on
acquiring what would have been the jewel in his media empire. Unfortunately
for him, at just about the last minute a bankruptcy judge rejected the bid by
the fabulously wealthy religious broadcaster and Christian Coalition founder,
and instead ruled that United Press International (UPI), one of the
preeminent news wire services, would be sold to a group of Middle Eastern
investors.

Fast forward to 2000: the venerable and troubled UPI has been sold yet again.
News World Communications, the new owner, is the thriving media arm of
another right-wing charismatic figure, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon and his
Unification Church. Although News World Communications has said that it
intends to maintain UPI as an independent news organization, it all hinges on
who's interpreting what "independent news organization" means. Media watchers
of all political stripes are wondering what to expect from this new Moon
circling the globe.

UPI, a 93-year-old agency, has been a financially troubled operation for the
better part of the past three decades, with multiple ownership changes during
the past 18 years. The serial owners have included Mexican publisher Mario
Vazquez Rana and a U.S. partner, Texan Joe Russo, and Infotechnology Inc.,
which is owned by Earl W. Brian, a California venture capitalist. Most
recently a group of Saudi Arabian industrialists presided over the company.
When the sale to Moon was announced, veteran White House reporter Helen
Thomas, UPI's most revered and honored employee, handed in her resignation
rather than pick up her paycheck from Moon.

The Unification Church, founded and built by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, enjoys
501(c)(3) nonprofit tax status despite the fact that it has been a major, if
not always apparent, player in U.S. politics for many years. Organizations
participating in overt political activities are prohibited from receiving the
501(c)(3) classification.

According to the 2000 edition of The Right Guide, published by Michigan-based
Economics America Inc., the Unification Church is "adamantly anticommunist,
and has worked with conservative organizations to oppose the spread of
communism as well as on issues of traditional values and morality." The
Church runs several spin-off organizations, usually with sympathetic-sounding
names like the Professors World Peace Academy and the Women's Federation for
Peace, the latter of which not too long ago gave $3.5 million to religious
right leader Jerry Falwell's Liberty University.

In addition to its massive media holdings, the Church owns the University of
Bridgeport, in Connecticut, a private academy. One of Moon's many moneymaking
ventures, reported the Washington Post, is Kahr Arms, a manufacturer of
"small but potent pistols"; in its marketing efforts Kahr highlights the
gun's "concealability."

The Church also enjoys a significant presence in Latin America. In February,
Reuters reported that Moon had already "spent $30 million over the last five
years to buy 138,000 acres" of Brazilian swampland to build New Hope, a
community for his followers. Other investments in South America include a
bank, a hotel and a newspaper network in Uruguay. (For an extensive list of
hundreds of Unification front groups, including religious, political, media
and business operations, see http://trancenet.org/moonism/uclist.shtml.)

In 1982 Moon established the Washington Times newspaper as his flagship
publication in the United States, and as the major conservative alternative
to the Washington Post in the nation's capital. From the outset, the
well-established and highly acclaimed Post dismissed the Times as nothing
more than a daily nuisance. However, with Moon's practically unlimited
financial resources the Times survived, reaching its apex in terms of
visibility when then President Ronald Reagan acknowledged that it was the one
newspaper he read thoroughly. Stridently conservative in its editorials and
op-ed pages, the Times has been a consistent money-losing proposition for
almost two decades.

Over the years Reverend Moon has been an on-again, off-again media
personality. The Right Guide notes that when he was a Sunday-school teacher
in Korea he claimed that Jesus asked him "to complete the task of
establishing God's kingdom on earth and bringing His peace to humankind."
This kind of hubris could be said to express itself when he shows up at one
of his mass wedding ceremonies to do the honors for several thousand brides
and grooms, most of whom have never met each other. In addition, the
reverend's family has been the focus of ribald revelations, including
allegations of drug use and infidelity, over the past few years. But in
general, Reverend Moon prefers to stay out of the glare of the media's
spotlight.

Daniel Junas, in the March-April 1995 issue of Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting's Extra!, pointed out that "while Moon himself has faded from the
consciousness of the American public, the Washington Times has left its own
mark on the political consciousness of the nation's capital and, indirectly,
the entire nation." In fact, one could make a compelling argument that the
Times and its sister publication, the national weekly Insight magazine, were
the most prominent publishers of Clinton-bashing stories, passing judgment at
a breakneck clip during the past seven-plus years.

What's in it for Moon? Judging from the record of his other media ventures,
including the Times, Insight and The World & I, a super-thick
general-interest monthly, money is not the issue. His business empire takes
care of that end of things. Several press accounts have provided a sneak
preview into what Moon may be up to. According to the May 21 Deutsche
Presse-Agentur, UPI, which is now only an Internet provider, can "provide
Moon's media firms with access to the electronic market."

Editor & Publisher Online reported that Arnaud De Borchgrave, who served as
editor in chief at the Washington Times from 1985 to 1991 and is now UPI's
chief executive officer, said that while the new owners assured him of
editorial independence, he hoped that "the sale would let him pursue
ambitious plans to recast UPI as a Web-based distributor of stories tracking
high-technology industries that may transform society." It remains to be seen
whether United Press International will now become another conservative
mouthpiece for the politics of Reverend Moon and his Unification Church.
Judging from the past record, calling it Unification Press International may
not be far off the mark.


- Bill Berkowitz

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