Flashback: Bush Praises Sun Myung Moon as 'Man With The Vision'

by John

07:10 Nov 25, 1996 EST

    BUENOS AIRES
    (Reuters) –

    The South Korean evangelist Sun Myung Moon launched a new Spanish-language
    newspaper for the whole of Latin America this weekend, with the backing
    of guest George Bush who praised Moon’s respect for editorial independence.
    The former U.S. president, guest speaker at a banquet Saturday to launch
    Moon’s new publication “Tiempos del Politics Mundo” (Times of the World),
    was full of praise for the controversial evangelist’s best-known newspaper,
    the Washington Times, and referred to Moon as “the man with the vision.”
    Bush then travelled with Moon to neighboring Uruguay Sunday to help him
    inaugurate a seminary in the capital Montevideo to train 4,200 young Japanese
    women to spread the word of his Church of Unification across Latin America.

    Moon already owns a major newspaper, bank and hotel in Uruguay and is
    buying up land in the Argentine province of Corrientes, where he plans
    to construct what his followers call “ideal cities”.

    “I want to salute Reverend Moon who is the founder of the Washington
    Times and of the new paper here,” said Bush, who was reported by the Washington
    Post to have been paid $100,000 for his Buenos Aires appearance.

    “A lot of my friends in South America don’t know about the Washington
    Times but it is an independent voice,” said Bush. ”The editors of the
    Washington Times tell me that never once has the man with the vision interfered
    with the running of the paper, a paper that in my view brings sanity to
    Washington DC.”

    “I am convinced that Tiempos del Mundo is going to do the same thing,”
    said Bush, who managed to avoid being photographed with the 76-year-old
    South Korean evangelist during his whole stay in Buenos Aires.

    Bush was staying at Argentine President Carlos Menem’s official Olivos
    residence, and there was a place reserved at the top table for Menem. But
    Menem, who met Moon secretly last year, snubbed him this time on the advice
    of foreign policy and religious policy aides.

    Argentina’s influential Catholic Church takes issue with Moon’s portrayl
    of himself as an incarnation of God fulfilling the mission of Christ. Critics
    say he brainwashes the vulnerable into joining him and some countries,
    such as Germany, consider him a threat to public order and refuse him an
    entry visa.

    In his speech at the Tiempos del Mundo launch, Moon made a bitter reference
    to the 11 months he spent in prison in the United States for tax evasion,
    saying he had “overcome significant persecution” in that country.

    Before his speech titled “In Search of the Origin of the Universe,”
    Moon promised his new paper would “provide the most edifying reports in
    every aspect…promoting harmony and reverting the tendency towards disbelief.”

    The first edition showed a tendency to optimistic headlines, its cover
    showing an elated President Bill Clinton over the headline “The North
    Moves Closer to the South.”

    Its Texan editor, Larry Moffitt, told Reuters the newspaper would come
    out on Sundays at first “but go daily very quickly” via satellite transmissions
    to editorial centers in 10 countries, including Argentina.

    “Within a year we hope to be in every country in the hemisphere,”
    Moffitt said. His circulation goals are ambitious: “There are 300 million
    Spanish speaking people in the hemisphere. That sounds like a good number.”

    Meanwhile Moon was in full flow, asking his 700 guest such penetrating
    questions as “why do sexual organs exist?” and ”when you defecate, do
    you wear a gas mask?”

Also see:

  • $1 million for Bush presidential library?
  • Japanese lawyers plead for Bush not to endorse Moon and elder fraud
  • NYT’s David Brooks ridicules claim of Bush-Moon connection