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whatisonthemoon · 1 year ago
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The MacNeil/Lehrer Report: Korean Intelligence and Lobbying Scandal (1977)
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This episode of “The MacNeil/Lehrer Report” on PBS originally aired June 20, 1977
You can watch the full video here
ROBERT MacNEIL: Good evening from Washington. Over the weekend we`ve had another burst of revelations and charges concerning the Korean intelligence and lobbying scandal. The New York Times reported that two years ago the United States bugged the Presidential mansion in South Korea, and produced specific reports on what the Times called "Korean bribery of American Congressmen." Former Texas Governor John Connally charged on NBC`s "Meet the Press" that the story could wind up as the biggest cover-up of this century. Official Washington, jittery after the Watergate experience, has watched the slow drip, drip of reported facts with mounting fascination. Every new element makes the web of Korean activity more tangled and harder to grasp. Jim? JIM LEHRER: This is a story with just about everything -- everything but an ending. Big names in government have been thrown around. There are tales of $100 bills stuffed in envelopes, lavish parties at exclusive Washington clubs, offers of gifts and trips and sex, secret agents lurking about and just about anything else you`d need to spice up a pulp thriller. But no only is the ending up in the air, the middle chapters aren`t complete. There are scads of investigations going on, but as of now most of the public information has come from those few who have chosen to talk or from various investigative journalism efforts. What we`re going to do tonight is simply put together the highlights of what is know at this point: the public record thus far, that will include some juicy tidbits of spice but also the more substantial question of what`s been happening to U.S. policy toward Korea in the process. MacNEIL: The roots of our Korean connection are buried in our military and economic entanglements with Korea. The bargaining counters have been troops and money. President Carter`s decision to with draw American ground troops from Korea signals the end of a military presence lasting since the Korean War. This presence began in earnest when the communist North Koreans invaded the South in 1950.The war ended in stalemate in 1953, after 54,000 Americans had died. The leading question for U.S. policy then became: how to prevent another conflict involving the major powers whose interests crossed at the thirty eighth parallel? The answer was regional stability and the containment of China. This meant the continuing presence of U.S. troops in South Korea, some 60,000 till 1970, then 42,000. It meant massive military and economic aid, officially more than $13 billion to this day. It also ultimately meant supporting whatever government happened to be in power in Seoul: at first, Syngman Rhee; then, after a coup in 1961, the increasingly despotic regime of Park Chung Hee. We wanted stability in Korea and Park was glad for U.S. assistance to buttress his power. That was the initial quid pro quo. But if Park needed U.S. troops and money to stay in power, we soon needed his help in Vietnam. South Korea sent 48,000 troops to Indochina in the late 1960`s. President Johnson and then-President Nixon paid nearly a billion dollars for them, and only told the Congress later. Special war-related contracts were also made available to Korean businessmen, hand picked by Park. When President Nixon recalled the Seventh Division from Korea in 1970, Park handed Uncle Sam another whopping bill, this time $1.5 billion in aid. Now a third bargaining counter appeared: rice. Washington began to ship huge amounts of rice to Korea under the Food for Peace program. Korea didn`t need that much rice; in fact, it ruined Korean rice production, as AID officials kept pointing out. But it kept the price of rice down in Korean cities where Park supporters resided. It enriched Park and his colleagues when they sold it for profit, and it kept American rice growers -- and their Congressmen -- happy. LEHRER: In Korea, President Park had other problems. There were student demonstrations, close and contested elections, and talk of U.S. troop withdrawals. So the new President set up the Korean Central Intelligence Agency -- the KCIA -- to combat this dissident trouble from within. It was modeled after the American CIA. but soon there were complaints from anti- Park Koreans about KCIA strong-arm tactics and out and-out brutality, among other things. But the organization grew -and flourished. A recent New York Times Magazine story estimated that it has more than 50,000 agents o various kinds on its payroll, both in Korea and abroad. And "abroad" has meant mostly the United States. Its job in Korea may have been to quiet the dissidents, but here the KCIA`s primary mission was to win friends and influence people, the more important the friends and the people the better. Dr. Jai Hyon Lee, Chief Cultural and Information Officer at the South Korean Embassy here from 1970 to `73, appeared on our program last November, and here`s what he had to say about it:
Dr. JAI HYON LEE: I was attending a series of staff meetings in the spring of 1973 at which the KCIA station chief, with the aid of his assistants, was telling us what sort of clandestine operations they were going to do. In other words, they were trying to orient us to their plans so that they could initiate us into that operation. And in those plans included were such as seduction and, if possible, payoff or buying off American leaders, including Congressmen and Senators. LEHRER: Press reports, particularly in the New York Times, say the American lobbying plan was hatched at a meeting in November O, at the presidential mansion in Seoul, known as the Blue House. It followed the Washington announcement that 20,000 of the 60,000 American troops in Korea then would be withdrawn. In addition to President Park and other high officials of the Seoul government, the Times and the Washington Post have reported that at least two other people were present: Tongsun Park and Pak Bo Hi. They are important to this total story, and we`ll be back to them. The Blue House plan included making campaign contributions and gifts to American public officials as well as offering them free trips to Korea and other places, honorary degrees from Korean universities and a lot of entertainment here in Washington. Dr. Lee summed up the purposes:
LEE: They wanted to influence the Congress and their legislative activities in favor of Park`s dictatorial policies -- that`s one thing they went after. But it was not only those KCIA agents stationed at the Embassy but there were other channels... LEHRER: Dr. Lee said the KCIA`s efforts here also included the suppression of criticism among Korean residents in the United States. In short, the KCIA operation here has been extensive. In addition to the work done out of the Embassy in Washington, there were also KCIA stations at Korean consulates in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Houston and at the Korean Observer Mission at the United Nations. MacNEIL: The key operative -- perhaps the most important unofficial link -- between the Korean government and the United States was-Washington businessman Tongsun Park. This Park -- no relation to President Park - became famous in Washington society for his lavish parties for society figures, Congressmen, Senators and high government officials -- valuable contacts for an unregistered foreign lobbyist. Park was born in Korea, but came to school in Washington in the 1950`s. As a student at Georgetown University he met Chung II Kwon, Korea`s Ambassador to Washington, later Prime Minister. Chung introduced Tongsun Park to President Park and to Kim Hyung Wook, the director of the KCIA. On June 5 the New York Times quoted Kim as saying, "When I was director of the KCIA, he was my agent. I controlled Park at that time." Kim said that Park volunteered to persuade Congressional friends to vote for more military aid to South Korea. In return, according to the Times, Park was later named sole agent of American rice sales to Korea. After attending that Blue House meeting in 1970 Park began operating in Washington in a big way: offering campaign contributions to Congressmen, throwing large parties for such luminaries as Tip O`Neill when he was majority leader and John McFall when he was majority whip. Among the hundreds of guests were high level officials like Gerald Ford, Elliott Richardson, and former CIA director Richard Helms. In all Park spent between one-half and one million dollars a year, according to the Washington Post. Just where all that money came from is not certain. But when Park fled the United States last winter, he left behind a network of holdings that connected him to many influential people in Washington as well as made money for him: a mansion in an exclusive area of Washington; an apartment in the Watergate; this headquarters for his holding company, Pacific Development, Incorporated; a third home in Georgetown; stock in Pisces, a fashionable Georgetown discotheque; businesses such as the Sutter`s Tavern Corporation, which operates the Georgetown Club -- the site of many of his parties. And Park included his friends in the deals. A number of "silent" partners in Congress have come to light. In a November 1976 interview former Democratic Congressman Richard T. Hanna of California told the New York Times he earned between $60,000 and $70,000 in three years as Park`s silent partner. According to the Times Park told federal investigators that another partner, former Congressman Cornelius Gallagher, who spent more than a year in jail on tax evasion charges, also accepted money from him. The Times said that in 1975, after Gallagher had left Congress and prison, Park transferred $250,000 from a Bermuda account to him. But from the beginning, rice deals were Park`s forte, and may have been his chief source of money. According to the Washington Post he received eight million dollars over four years in the early 1970`s from just one U.S. rice exporter. Congressman John McFall, a Democrat who represents a rice-growing district in California, has told the Washington Post that he wrote at least four letters for Park and received some 9,000 in cash over a period of five years. In one letter written in February of 1973, McFall praised Tongsun Park to President Park Chung Hee. Two months later Park held a party to celebrate McFall`s selection as majority whip in the House. One of Park`s contributions to McFall was $4,000 in cash left at his office on October 18, 1974, while McFall was out campaigning. JOHN McFALL: That was a legal contribution from Tongsun Park, who in 1974 was not under any kind of suspicion. He was a well-known man here in town. I put that into a legal account. I spent it for legal office expenditures, and I have filed with the clerk a complete report of my office account from its beginning in 1972 and a report for this Congress which shows how I spent that money for newsletters and office equipment. That is a complete statement of what my relationship is with Tongsun Park, which is only those two legal contributions. I have known him only as a rice salesman over the years, and helped to sell California rice, with him as a broker for South Korea. MacNEIL: Until a new law came into effect on January 1, 1975, foreign contributions to Congressional campaigns were not illegal. Otto Passman, the powerful chairman of the House subcommittee that approved foreign aid appropriations, also wrote Park Chung Hee to praise the "phenomenal" work of Tongsun Park in arranging large American rice sales to South Korea. According to the Washington Post, the former Louisiana Democrat also noted that Korean purchases of rice, cotton and soybeans had "greatly helped" his district and state. Park also helped sell rice grown in the Louisiana district of former Congressman Edwin Edwards and offered a contribution to his gubernatorial campaign. Edwards, now Governor of Louisiana, claims he refused the contribution but admits that his wife, Elaine, did accept $10,000 in cash from Park. Gov. EDWIN EDWARDS, (D) Louisiana: My wife does many things that I don`t know about, and vice-versa. I`m sure every wife has secrets from her husband, some large, some small. This particular incident happened five years ago, seven months before I became Governor, two months before I won the first primary, at a time when I was not on the public payroll. Even my harshest critic has not suggested that there was any quid pro quo for the money or that I had done this, that or the other for Tongsun Park in return for the contribution. It was a private matter between him and Elaine. And unless and until someone is prepared to show a violation of the public trust or an improper action on behalf of Park in return for it, then I never did understand the great hue and cry about it. MacNEIL: In mid-October last year, Park quietly left the United States, leaving Justice Department lawyers with whom he had been cooperating wondering whether he would ever return. Park visited Seoul and Tokyo after his departure, according to the Washington Post, and is now believed to be living in London. LEHRER: Tongsun Park wasn`t the only Korean who threw big parties in Washington. Another was Suzi Park Thomson, a naturalized U.S. citizen who worked for four different Congressmen in the last ten years. Her last job was with Carl Albert, the recently retired Speaker of the House. She earned $14,000 a year as a clerk-typist, but somehow managed to throw numerous large and expensive parties to mix Congressmen and Koreans. The Justice Department is granting her immunity to talk, according to the New York Times. But there is more to this, of course, than parties. Back to Jai Hyon Lee, the former press secretary at the Korean Embassy in Washington. He told us of a scene one day in the Ambassador`s office: LEE: The Ambassador was at the desk and quite busy packing up something out of his attached case. As I approached he looked up and said, "Well, I`m busy. Why don`t you speak up for what you got on your mind? I have to leave soon." So I said, "I can`t discuss this matter within a matter of two or three minutes." By that time he was finishing up his packing of hundred dollar bills into a number of plain white envelopes, and I was kind of appalled to see so much cash. I saw a large amount of money, but never in cash. So I asked him what he was doing. He said, "Well, K need these things delivered." He was by then through with stuffing this money into envelopes, and he put some envelopes into his inside pockets and outside pockets; still there were about a good two dozen envelopes left in his briefcase. He closed the briefcase and he was standing up, so I asked him where he was going. And he said, "To the Capitol." LEHRER: That brings us to another important man who attended the Blue House meeting. His name is Colonel Pak Bo Hi, a former Korean intelligence officer and now known mainly as translator and aide to controversial Reverend Sun Myung Moon. In 1964 Colonel Pak helped found an organization here called the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation. A former intelligence colleague, Kim Jong Pil, the founder of the Korean CIA, was named honorary chairman. Honorary presidents through the years have included people like former U.S. Presidents Truman and Eisenhower. Richard Nixon was on the board of directors at one time and so were Ed Sullivan and Perle Mesta. The Foundation appealed for money to finance Radio Free Asia, which unlike Radio Free Europe had no connection to the U.S. government, although some contributors may have thought it did. Another of its projects was the Children`s Relief Fund, set up to help feed hungry children. Last October the New York State Board of Social Welfare barred the Foundation from further fund raising in the state on the grounds that an investigation showed that only eight percent of its money actually went to children. There have been suggestions that-this and other funds collected by the Foundation were used in the Blue House lobby effort but there is no publicly disclosed evidence to back that up. Colonel Pak`s association with money did not end with the Foundation, however. He was also involved in the formation of the Diplomat National Bank in Washington. According to the New York Times, Colonel Pak personally assembled half of the bank`s initial two-`million-dollar capital with the express purpose of servicing the Asian-American community.
And one of the bank`s biggest depositors was Reverend Moon`s Unification Church. In addition, the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation moved its accounts to the new bank. There`s also a Tongsun Park connection in this one. The Times reported that the bank`s organizers kept Park off the board of the bank but that Park secretly went ahead and invested $200,000 in the project through business associates. The directors have since asked the Park people as well as Colonel Pak and the Unification Church group to sell their shares. While there has been the implication that the bank was used as a depository for some of the influence-peddling money, there have been no charges that the bank itself was involved in any wrongdoing. MacNEIL: How many officials and members of Congress this vast and intricate network was able to reach is as yet unclear. The Washington Post reported "at least twenty-two," the Washington Star sails many as twenty-five," and the New York Times reported the possible involvement of ninety members" of Congress. Representative John Brademas of Indiana, the present majority whip, said he received three campaign contributions from Park totaling $5,150, but turned down a free vacation. According to the Washington Post, Nancy Howe, former aide to Betty Ford, and her husband accepted two vacations. Jerome Waldie, former Democratic Congressman from California, accepted $2,000 for his gubernatorial race. Others under investigation, according to the Washington Post, for accepting contributions include Representatives Joseph Ad abbo, John Murphy and Lester Wolff, all New York Democrats; Republican Tennyson Guyer of, Ohio and Democrat Robert Leggett of California. A number of Congressmen also took trips to Korea. According to the New York Times, they included Republican Edward Derwinski of Illinois an Democrat Clement Zablocki of Wisconsin. Zablocki is also a member of the Advisory Council of the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation. Others went to Korea with money provided by the Korean-U.S. Economic Council, a group closely associated with the Korean government. According to the Washington Post these included Republicans Willaim Ketchum of California, Robert Daniel, Jr. of Virginia, Marjorie Holt of Maryland, and Senator Jake Garn of Utah. Garn told the Post he took the trip because "I don`t believe in junkets at the taxpayers` expense." This same organization partly funded the trips of Republican Thad Cochran and Democrat David Bowen, both of Mississippi, and Democrat Dawson Mathis of Georgia, according to the Washington Post. When questioned, many said they felt no conflict. Some, given gets or contributions, felt it necessary to return them. According to the Washington Post, these people gave gifts back: Democrat Phil Burton of California sent back to the Korean Embassy a topaz pin that had been left at his office for his wife. Republican Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska returned a campaign contribution of at least $2,500. Don Bonker, a Democrat from the State of Washington, was offered something different -- a beautiful woman. He said no. Democrats Walter B. Jones of North Carolina and Helen Meyner of New Jersey both turned down free trips to South Korea. Republican Charles Wiggins of California was offered a contribution he declined. Rep. CHARLES WIGGINS`, (R) California: It was in 1974, and it was in the election season, and we had some small talk and simply exchanged pleasantries which included a question on his part as to how my campaign was going. And I told him that it appeared to be going fine. Then he said that he hoped that I was re-elected, and he said that." there are people in Korea that would be interested in helping your campaign." Well, he simply made that statement, and that triggered my response, which was simply that it`s illegal for foreign nationals to make contributions to American political races and of course ,I couldn`t accept any such help. MacNEIL: John Nidecker, a White House aide to President Nixon, was given $10,000 in cash as he left Korea after a visit in 1974. He returned the money and also later gifts of antiques worth another $10,000. A few months later a Korean national assemblyman left valuable gifts for twelve White House aides, including a pearl necklace for President Nixon`s secretary, Rosemary Woods. All those gifts were mailed back to Korea. Former House Speaker Carl Albert, in whole office Suzi Park Thomson worked, was showered with gifts of Korean art worth more than $5,000. Albert reported them to the government, and they now sit in the vaults of the General Services Administration. LEHRER: There is a final fundamental question: did the Blue House plan to influence the Congress in its Korean policy pay off? All that`s known at this point is the Congressional record on Korea -- every Congressional effort to call for a troop withdrawal has been defeated. In the most recent action last Thursday, the Senate declined to endorse President Carter`s decision to pull out the remaining 42,000 troops. The record is the same on military and economic aid.-- almost every effort to reduce it has been defeated. Another "known" in this equation is that Melvin Laird, then Secretary of Defense, warned the State Department as early as 1970 that the Koreans had set up a lobbying effort to undermine the withdrawal of American troops. But anything substantial one way or another on the question of linkage will have to await the outcome of one of at least fifteen investigations now under way. There is a special Korean Investigation Subcommittee of the House International Relations Committee. The House Ethics Committee is probing the conduct of individual members of Congress. A Senate subcommittee has looked into connections between an oil company and Tongsun Park. And the Senate Intelligence Committee is now reviewing actions by the FBI, CIA, and Justice and State Departments. The Justice Department itself has been presenting evidence to a grand jury for over a year. Other agencies, which include the IRS, SEC, Federal Reserve Board, Department of Agriculture and the Army, are looking into questions germane to them -- the tax returns of possibly involved Congressmen, possible payoffs by defense contractors, the financing of the Diplomat Bank, illegal kickbacks on rice deals, rigging of bids on military contracts, and so on. Finally, last week, the Republican leadership, Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee and Representative John Rhodes of Arizona, suggested it was time for the appointment of a Watergate-style prosecutor. So far, President Carter says no. Jody Powell, the President`s spokesman, said that unlike Watergate, there was no reason to believe the Attorney General to be involved or in any way unable to carry out an appropriate investigation. Everywhere,. it seems, there are some reminders of Watergate. One of the most obvious areas of comparison is the possibility of an official cover- up. Donald Ranard, former head of the State Department`s Office of Korean Affairs, raised this question on this program last November. DONALD RANARD: It seems to me that we knew enough to have moved this administration towards an investigation far earlier than it began. We knew this beginning in 1970, we knew it in `71; in `72 I was talking to the Department of Justice; in `73 I was discussing the matter with the FBI and in `74 as well. But for reasons which I still have some difficulty grasping, it was an administrative decision, I believe, not to move ahead with it. LEHRER: Ranard claims to have received numerous rebuffs from Justice Department officials including John Mitchell, Richard Kleindeinst and Robert Mardian on grounds of "insufficient evidence" for prosecution. If the government did indeed move slowly as charged, why was there a reluctance to investigate aggressively? RANARD: Because of the money being passed -being passed, I think, on both sides of the aisle. I think the administration was probably in no position to open an investigation against the Korean CIA. MacNEIL: Whatever the reason for the delays, there is clearly no mood in Washington for any rush to judgment. And the very deliberate pace of all these investigations has fed the frequent charges of a cover-up. But at this moment only federal officials at the heart of the investigation could say whether this is going to blow up into a scandal of Watergate proportions or disappear in a puff of political smoke. Although there have been unconfirmed reports, it is not even known whether anyone -- Congressmen, U.S. officials, or Koreans -will be indicted...and if they are indicted, for what specific crimes. To know all that we`ll have to wait until more facts come out. Much may depend on the evidence of Kim Hyung Wook, the former KCIA boss who controlled Tongsun Park. Kim is now living here in exile. On Wednesday he testifies in public before a House subcommittee.
Related links
President Park Said to Direct Lobbying (1978)
Korean Bribe Figure Tied to Bank Inquiry (1977)
Former KCIA Head Says Park Tong Sun was Korean Agent (1977)
Kim Jong Pil offers support to the Unification Church members in San Francisco in 1962
George Bush, head of CIA, protected Moon
How Moonies cult helped Tae Kwon Do
Rev. Moon Aide Concedes KCIA Sent Him $3,000 (1978)
House Unit to Query Aides to U.S. in Korea (1977)
What the KCIA and the Moonies did to the Editor of the Korea Journal, Song Sun Keun
Rev. Moon Buys а College, Hires Spooks & Moonies (1992)
Neil Salonen - KCIA Agents Becoming UC Members is Not Aboveboard!
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loftstudios · 5 years ago
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By Sara Darling
25.6
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whatisonthemoonarchive · 6 years ago
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More on Col. Pak & the Little Angels
http://whatisonthemoon.tumblr.com/post/183521030978/sun-myung-moons-weekly-sex-orgies
This recent post (link above) has me thinking again about the value of the EIR (Executive Intelligence Review). One can say what they want about Lyndon LaRouche, the founder of this online publication. However, even with LaRouche's checkered past, the validity and accuracy of the EIR, as it details certain obscure operations of the Moon Organization, is something that I believe needs to be looked at very closely. Or at the very least, we have to consider the meaning of some of the connections the EIR has made between the Mooniverse and intelligence assets/agents.
Let's (again) look at what the EIR has to say about the Little Angels:
The sex is a specialty of Moon's own Gnostic "family" cult. Remember the Congressional Madam scandals of the 1970s, featuring Tong Sun Park and Suzy Park Thomson? That was just the tip of the iceberg of "The Reverend" Moon's sexual-favors operation. Military intelligence officers who investigated Unification Church operations in Washington in the 1970s and '80s, report that the recruitment device used on ranking, conservative political and military officials was to hold weekly orgies, arranged by Col. Bo Hi Pak, the Unification Church official who was a top officer of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA). The special treat at these affairs were the "Little Angels"—Korean schoolgirls brought over by Moon as a singing group. The photo files from these sessions are reported to be a powerful influence in certain circles to this very day.
(https://larouchepub.com/other/2002/2949moonification.html)
I wish we had some footnotes to support what is being said above about the Little Angels beings used as literal sex objects. Maybe one day a Little Angel can come forward and tell the whole story about what happened...if indeed this "sex operation" did indeed happen.
In Jim Hougan's book "SPOOKS", we have at least another reference to the idea that "sex ops" were in fact taking place at Tongsun Park's Georgetown Club:
As for (Ed) Wilson, besides trafficking in arms, there were longstanding allegations that he handled sexual blackmail operations for the CIA: "According to fugitive ex-CIA officer Frank Terpil, CIA-directed sexual blackmailing operations were intensive in Washington about the time of the Watergate scandal. One of those operations, Terpil claims, was run by his former partner, Ed Wilson. Wilson's base of operations for arranging trysts for the politically powerful was, Terpil says, Korean agent Tong Sun Park's George Town Club..."
(http://visupview.blogspot.com/2016/04/belgium-into-heart-of-darkness-part-v.html)
Adding the last bit of information to the mix, we would then have Ed Wilson of the CIA...plus...Bo Hi Pak of the KCIA arranging trysts with key political figures...seems likely to me, I guess.
To conclude here, I will show a key excerpt from one of Bo Hi Pak's question & answer sessions in front of the Fraser Committee. Pak most definitely alludes to the Little Angels having intimate contact with the members of the Georgetown Club. In my opinion, Col. Pak is most likely telling us in cryptic language, that the sexual allegations being made about the Little Angels in the EIR article are true. And for all we know, there may be someone on the Fraser Committee that has been seduced by one of the Little Angels. Here's what Pak said:
Mr. DERWINSKI:...did Tongsun Park ever provide assistance to the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation or to any project of the KCFF?
Mr. PAK: No, sir. The answer is no. To elaborate a little bit more, he never came to our meetings, any type of meeting, he never contributed any money to KCFF. As a matter of fact, at one time former Ambassador Yang said, "let us go after the performance of the Little Angels to the reception at the Georgetown Club, which he operates."...So, I thought the Ambassador had something in his mind that Mr. Park might give the reception for free or something. After the Kennedy Center performance we had a reception at the Georgetown Club where the little girls met many of the VIP's and so forth. The bill was very high, the Georgetown Club was very expensive...Later on, we were oppressed by bills and we paid every penny of them.
(https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pur1.32754077268930;view=1up;seq=190, P. 182)
When the VIP's met the "little girls" as the Colonel says...well, I guess we will have to speculate but I can only think the worst! Bo Hi Pak in all liklihood used these girls as a way of buying influence with the U.S. Government...and was in cohoots with Tongsun Park to boot. Shame on Bo Hi Pak! I hope Jonathan Park is reading this, the not-so-genuine whistleblower and son of Col. Pak. If "Johnny Boy" was a true whistleblower he would 'fess up about his Father's deep and dark past!
'Til the next,
Don Diligent
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whatisonthemoon · 3 years ago
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Ex-Director Informs On KCIA Action: U.S. Probers Given Secret and Detailed Reports for 2 Years
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Photo: Jhoon Rhee, Bo Hi Pak, and early Unification Church members in the U.S. Scott Armstrong and Charles R. Babcock, Washington Post, 1977 (pdf)
For the past two years, a former director of the South Korean Intelligence Agency has been secretly giving federal investigators here detailed information about the KCIA's efforts to influence I.I.S. officials with cash and gifts.
• According to informed sources, Kim Hyung Wook, who was KCIA director in Seoul for seven years during the 1960s, has provided investigators with a road map for their probe of the South Korean influence-buying scheme by revealing secret Swiss bank accounts, identifying South Korean businesses used as KCIA covers and naming key KCIA agents, including South Korean businessman Tongsun Park. In particular, Kim has told U.S. investigators: • South Korean President Park Chung Hee systematically has diverted to Swiss bank accounts roughly 5 per cent of all foreign investments in his country.  • Park Chung Hee regularly funnelled money into campaigns of congressional and presidential candidates here during the 1960s. • U.S. congressmen visiting South Korea were routinely given cash-filled envelopes, elaborate entertainment, female companionship, honorary degrees and medals. • A number of U.S. congressmen now under federal investigation were given cash in this country through Tongsun Park and other KCIA. conduits here, With some congressmen receiving as much as $50,000 each. •Park Chung Hee's son-in-law, Han Byung Ki, then deputy ambassador in the South Korean mission to the United Nations, directed KCIA agents who tried to suppress South Korean dissidents in this country.  • Bo Hi Pak, a former military attaehe at the South Korean Embassy here who became translator and top aide for South Korean evangelist Sun Myung Moon, used both Moon's Unification Church and the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation here as vehicles for KCIA propaganda here and abroad. Former KCIA director Kim, who has been cooperating with Justice Department investigators since October, 1975, has provided them with the names of many of the congressmen now under investigation for accepting cash and gifts from Tongsun Park. Kim later provided similar information to congressional investigators looking into the South Kojean influence-peddling. Last autumn, sources close to the congressional inquiry told The Washington Post about Kim's extensive cooperation with U.S. authorities, but they requested that none of the details be used until Kim's role became public. In yesterday's editions of The New York Times, some of Kim's role was revealed by Times reporter and Asian specialist Richard Halloran. Kim, who was ousted from his KCIA post by Park Chung Hee late in 1969, has been living in exile in New Jersey since 1973. He has maintained close ties with prominent South Korean politicians and intelligence officials, according to U.S. intelligence sources. His New York Times interview, in which Kim called for the immediate resignation of Park Chung Hee, is therefore considered by some 'U.S. intelli- gence analysts as a sign that opposition to Park Chung Hee in Seoul might be more serious than previously believed. Intelligence community sources noted yesterday that Kim tong has been identified as an opponent of Park Chung Hee. His public comments are politically motivated and calculated to catalyze opposition in Seoul, they said. Kim's statements to The Times, however, contain some minor conflicts with what he previously has said to federal investigators. After telling investigators last year that he knew of no intelligence activities by Washington karate entrepreneur Jhoon Rhee or Korean-born Capitol Hill secretary Suzi Park Thomson, Kim described them both in The Times interview as KCIA "lesser operatives." Kim told U.S. investigators last year that Tongsun Park had "no specific relationship" with the KCIA while Kim was its director. In The Times interview, Kim was quoted as saying: "When I was director of the KCIA, he was my agent. I controlled Park at that time." Despite these conflicts, U.S. investigators find Kim to be credible. Knowledgeable sources are unsure, however, whether Kim will ever be used as a witness in criminal trials because much of his information is second hand and therefore technically excludable as hearsay. Kim is expected to be asked to testify at congressional hearings, however. Two parallel congressional investigations into the KCIA's activities in the United States have expressed interest in Kim's testimony. A House International Relations subcommittee headed by Rep. Donald Fraser (D-Minn.) made contact with Kim in early 1976 and its staff is known to have interviewed him several times since then. The Fraser subcommittee has held extensive hearings on KCIA's role in this country and is now in the midst of an 18-month investigation on the wide range of U.S.-South Korea relations. Because of discrepancies in Kim's recollections of events to the subcommittee's investigators, Fraser planned to ask Kim to supply further testimony under oath, sources close to that investigation said yesterday. The ethics committee investigators are particularly interested in Kim's testimony because he has named Tongsun Park as a KCIA agent and their inquiries center on whether congressmen knew Tongsun Park was a foreign agent. In his conversations with U.S. investigators, Kim said Tongsun Park was introduced to him in 1964 by Tongsun Park's mentor, Chung II Kwon, when Chung returned from being ambassador to the U.S. to become foreign minister. For several years after that, Kim told investigators, Tongsun Park asked the KCIA for financial assistance in operating his George Town Club. Park did not become formally associated with the KCIA until after Kim's ouster as KCIA director in 1969. At first, the flamboyant South Korean businessman acted as an "agent" under the direction of a "case officer." according to U.S. sources. Later, Tongsun Park himself became a "case officer," directing agents he himself had recruited. Because of his continuing close ties to officials in the South Korean government, former KCIA director Kim was also able to tell investigators about the recruitment of Hancho Kim, another South Korean doing business in Washington, tobe groomed as Tongsun Park's replacement in 1975 after Park came under U.S. scrutiny fo rhis lobbying activities on Capitol Hill. Hancho Kim, who Is in the cosmetics business and has been a trustee of American University here, reportedly received $600,000 from the Park Chung Hee regime to finance lobbying and influence-buying activities in Washington. Aside from a few articles appearing under his name in newspapers including The New York Times and The Washington Star, there has been little evidence of what Hancho • Kim has done with the money. The House ethics committee, which is investigating charges that many former and current congress- . men accepted cash and gifts from South Korean agents, also plans to question Kim, sources said yesterday. Kim is the second high ranking KCIA official known to be cooperating with U.S. investigators. Kim Sang Kuen, who was the No. 2 KCIA agent stationed at the South Korean embassy here, asked for U.S. asylum last fall after he was recalled by the Park regime when the influence-buying scandal became public. While Kim Sang Kuen did not have access to as wide at range of KCIA activities as former KCIA director Kim Hyung Wook, he has been able to provide U.S. investigators with more up-to-date information about the South Korean influence-buying effort here. Beyond the basic information and guidance Kim Hyung Wook has provided, many of his more sensational allegations are considered by investigators to be difficult to confirm. Others have no bearing on possible prosecutions. Kim told investigators, for example, that Park Chung Hee has diverted to Swiss bank accounts for conversion to cash roughly 5 per cent of all foreign investments in South Korea through kickbacks from foreign companies, campaign contributions from them and compulsary commissions. Kim has provided the name of one KCIA agent who was paid $50,000 to take check from an American corporation doing business in South Korea to Switzerland and return to South Korea with currency. Kim alternately has made and withdrawn allegations that Park Chung Hee funnelled cash into the presidential campaigns of Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 and Hubert H. Humphery in 1968. Among the names of congressmen who Kim has names as recipients of money, campaign contributions or gifts . from Tongsur Park and . William Broomfield, (R-. Mich.), Cornelius Gallagher, (D-N.J.), Richard T. Hanna (D-Calif.), John M. Murphy (D-N.Y.), and Otto E. Passman (D-La.). Broomfield, Murphy and Passman have denied receiving money or gifts from Park. Hanna has acknowledged substantial business deals and campaign funds from Park. Gallagher has declined comment. According to knowledgeable sources, Kim also has periodically alluded to the existence of a long KCIA list of 'U.S. congressmen paid by South Korea, but he has failed to produce any such list. Kim has also described for U.S. investigators details of the activities of Bo Hi Pak, principal aide and translator for evangelist Sun Myung Moon. Pak jointly gained influence in Moon's Unification Church and founded the Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation here as independent KCIA operations to provide "cover" and money for other KCIA personnel, according to Kim's account. According to U.S. intelligence sources, Moon was fully aware of Pak's connection with the KCIA and his use of the Unification. Church for political purposes but was not himself an employee of the KCIA. The U.S. CIA was fully aware of Pak's role here as a KCIA operative, according to two informed sources. State Department officials were aware of Bo Hi Pak's role by 1970 for example, and protested to the Department of Justice, which declined to prosecute Pak. 
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whatisonthemoonarchive · 6 years ago
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SUN MYUNG MOON’S WEEKLY SEX ORGIES
December 20, 2002 issue of Executive Intelligence Review (EIR), ‘The ‘No Soul’ Gang Behind Reverend Moon’s Gnostic Sex Cult’: “ The sex is a specialty of Moon’s own gnostic “family” cult. Remember the Congressional Madam scandals of the 1970s, featuring Tong Sun Park and Suzy Park Thomson? That was just the tip of the iceberg of”The Reverend” Moon’s sexual-favors operation. Military intelligence officers who investigated Unification Church operations in Washington in the 1970s and ‘&0s, report that the recruitment device used on ranking, conservative and military officials was to hold weekly orgies, arranged by Col. Bo Hi Pak, who was a top officer of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA). The special treat at these affairs were the “Little Angels”, Korean schoolgirls brought over by Moon as a singing group. The photo files from these sessions are reported to be a powerful influence in certain circles to this very day.
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