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Week-Long Storm At Wash Times Leaves Unanswered Questions In Its Wake

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(from top to bottom) Rev. Sun Myung Moon, Hyun Jin Preston Moon, Hyung Jin Moon, John Solomon and Jonathan Slevin

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A week that began with the ousting of three executives at the Washington Times and ended with the announcement that top editor John Solomon had resigned leaves three questions whose answers will determine the fate of the Times:

How will a newspaper that has never been a profit-making proposition survive in the current brutal media business climate? Will a family feud in the Unification Church, whose founder Rev. Sun Myung Moon created the Times, be resolved in a way auspicious for the future of the paper? And, finally, what will its ideological and journalistic identity be going forward?

Driving home the financial peril the paper finds itself in, today came the news that contributions to employee 401(k) accounts has been suspended. Times employees breathed a sigh of relief when their paychecks came through today.

The newspaper's parent company is controlled by Preston Moon, one of Rev. Moon's 13 children who sources have told TPM is currently locked in a dispute with the rest of his family, particularly a younger brother who Rev. Moon designated as his primary heir.

Originally founded in the early 1980s to toe Rev. Moon's staunchly anti-communist line in Washington, the Times has gone through several phases of ideological identity. But its influence has long exceeded its tiny print circulation numbers. Just today, the Times published a reminder it can be a force for right-leaning investigative journalism in the form of a 2,800-word front-pager purporting to expose wrongdoing by the pro-engagement National Iranian American Council.

Executive editor John Solomon, the public face of the paper for nearly two years and a largely respected figure in the newsroom, has been conspicuously absent this week, reportedly holing up in his cabin in Virginia earlier this week, not appearing at the Times offices, and not commenting to the media. His resignation was announced by the paper's outside PR firm in a terse email Thursday evening. "Purple Nation" opinion columnist Lanny Davis quickly followed Solomon out the door.

As furor grew in the newsroom, some felt Solomon was abandoning his staff amid a company-wide shakeup and were disappointed he did not call or e-mail, according to TPM's conversations with Times sources.

Managing editor for digital Jeffrey Birnbaum reportedly told the Times staff that Solomon tendered his resignation Nov. 6 -- two days before the announcement of the firing of the three executives -- but it's unclear why the announcement didn't come for nearly a week amid studied silence.

Editorial employees from the rank-and-file up through top editors have been left in the dark about what's going on, though they were told to stop talking to the press. One source told TPM that the managing editor for print teared up when asked about Solomon's absence this week. The Times' new publisher said in the announcement of the shakeup Sunday that an "assessment team" would be reviewing the paper's sustainability model.

But the way out of the current crisis -- short of some outside solution -- will likely also hinge on resolution of the conflict inside the Moon family. A newsroom source told TPM that Preston Moon fired the top executives because they sided against him in the ongoing feud -- and a source in contact with high church officials told us that Preston acted alone, against Rev. Moon's wishes.

Meanwhile, notes of sermons given by Rev. Moon in recent weeks suggest that the paper has been on the mind of the "True Father." He said at one September event, "The Washington Times has to take responsibility for people going to hell in America."

We plan to keep on this story, so stay tuned. TPM's complete coverage is here.

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19 comments

Recommend Recommend (3)

November 13, 2009 6:24 PM   

"The Washington Times has to take responsibility for people going to hell in America."

Somewhat delusional, but a nice thought nonetheless.

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November 13, 2009 6:33 PM    in reply to Tombien

So, the Washington Times is sending people to hell? Maybe they should stop doing that.

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November 14, 2009 6:26 AM    in reply to Tombien

"The Washington Times has to take responsibility for people going to hell in America."

Fine with me, and they can take responsibility for helping us get there, along with responsibility for being a worthless unsustainable propaganda money-sink, which is why they are finally dead to America.

Rest in pieces, Washed-Up Times.

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November 13, 2009 7:38 PM   

Does anyone really think this is a story of import? Personally, I do not and could care less what happens to this paper.

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November 14, 2009 8:55 AM    in reply to lousgirl84

Journalists get all worked up about their own, yes, like it was some monumental issue. I don't overly care, but I would like to see these losers withdraw from the market in the abstract. Moonie propaganda masquerading as a newspaper is a little much for me.

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November 14, 2009 9:39 AM    in reply to Overreach THIS!

"a newspaper that has never been a profit-making proposition"

That alone is news, add the family feud and you got popcorn munching entertainment.

More proof that our 4th Estate was bought out by the Republicans and their book-cookers so long ago, we can hardly pick the moment.

Newspapers and any media should be profitable. To compete in "scoop" print journalism, you need a real staff, with investigative bulldog reporters who aren't in the business to do anyone any favors, especially those in power.

But to act as a propaganda tool for dying ideology all you need are some hacks who can string a few paragraphs together. Like FOX, the Wash Times was never really competing in the scoop business, they were created for propaganda, not real news.

This is a very important story, I can't imagine why someone would consider it worthless news.

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November 14, 2009 12:56 PM    in reply to JEP07

Good comments.

Howard Kurtz (W.Post's media critic (!) thinks WT is totally groovy BTW, especially since his W. Post crony Solomon joined the propaganda sheet. Not long ago, Kurtz corralled Psycho Lady http://www.bueker.net/trainspotting/map.php?file=maps/slovakia/slovakia.gif from The Washington Times to give assurance on CNN that Fox was really solid news, and to add some absolutely ridiculous commentary himself supporting Fox.

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Joe

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November 13, 2009 11:23 PM   

Wow, does that mean that there will only be one conservative newspaper left in DC?

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November 14, 2009 12:46 PM    in reply to Joe

This one had me laffin' by the way! Good on ya!

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November 14, 2009 6:20 AM   

This was utterly impossible to foresee. Amirite?

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November 14, 2009 9:52 AM   

"contributions to employee 401(k) accounts has been suspended..."

Well, there's the money shot.

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November 14, 2009 10:44 AM   

The real question - and the one that goes to the heart of this story - is: "Where does all the money come from?" The answer is not the Unification Church. The church is a conduit for money, but not the source. One key fact is Moon's rise and presence in the United States was due to support from right-wing Japanese industrialists who desired political influence over American economic and military policy in the Pacific region.

Robert Parry, Fred Clarkson, Daniel Junas and John Gorenfeld have long reported on the background to Moon's organization. This is worth following up. One key document is Bo Hi Pak's testimony in the Koreagate scandal. Look it up.

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November 14, 2009 3:39 PM    in reply to warbaby

Thanks for the props. I'm going to be serializing my Moon book, "King of America," on my blog.

The real story here is how embarrassing it ought to be to Washington family values politicos to have spent over 20 years in bed with the Asian counterpart to Scientology.

Where does the money come from? Ask the victims of the church's aggressive widow-swindling operation in Japan:

http://www1k.mesh.ne.jp/reikan/english/active/active.htm

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November 15, 2009 3:09 PM    in reply to JohnGorenfeld

No question that the Moon organization milks a lot of God-scams through the Unification Church.

My point is the Church revenue isn't sufficient to cover the sort of expenditures that are visible. The money-laundering and influence buying are operations that use the Church as a conduit, but the source of the hot money is outside the UC.

Because the HP are running the universe (in their own view) they make the perfect fronts for other interests. Whatever goes down is all due to Father... etc.

So when Japanese industrialists want access to US raw materials - like the orgy of old-growth clearcutting that caved in the western timber industry and shipped most of the wood to Japan as raw logs. Moon gets tagged for running the Wise Use movement providing political cover -- it's all part of Father's plan and the Japanese interests go unexamined.

For one example of things being more a little more complex than just a sex-crazed religious kook with a penchant for spanking... Not that kookiness isn't interesting, strange and entertaininly twisted. It's just not the whole picture.

The Unification Church is just one strand of spaghetti in a very large pot.

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November 14, 2009 12:39 PM   

Interesting to compare Moon's empire with that of another furiner, Rupert Murdoch.
Both are using American tax laws to spew propaganda, regardless of what it costs and how uneconomic it may be.
Both have dynastic empires with their children as the "next in line" to take control.
Both have internecine warfare taking place among their heirs.

And both Murdoch and Moon HATE America.

I also have to scratch my head. Why is is that - similar to Communist regimes - supposed "religious" organizations (cults) are routinely handed over to the children of the Dear Leader? Robertson, Graham, Moon, et al...the "best" leaders from the next generation are most often the children of the Religous Elite, chosen from wealth and good fortune.

Nice job, if you can get it, I suppose.

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November 14, 2009 1:39 PM   

How could anyone work for that paper

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Ray

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November 14, 2009 2:58 PM   

The Washington Times does have some alternative value as a fundraising prop. Tours of Japanese and Koreans regularly come to the USA and a of the visit centerpiece is the visit to The Washington Times to show how important Rev Moon is. Hence the nice marble entrance with attached nice auditorium that was part of the original construction.
There is a Unification narrative that the Washington Times helped Rev Moon defeat communism through it's guidance to Reagan and Bush senior. For a Unification view see
http://www.tparents.org/Library/Unification/Books/Messiah2/Messiah2-16.htm
Or lots of good quotes
http://www.realjournalism.net/times.htm
Even though communism is no longer the threat it was, the Washington Times is still needed to show how important Rev moon is. Sorry I disagree that it's a front for the Japanese or Korean intelligence even though the money comes from Japan and Korea they don't need any of the extraneous religious nonsense.
However I don't think the Washington Times has ever made money even with the other income it produces.
The bigger question is why an organization that is supposedly religious and (claims to be) interested in helping people would invest so much of it's resources in a right-wing newspaper. I would estimate at least 90% of expenditure in the USA has gone down the Time's drain.
The answer is partly it's propaganda and fundraising value but mainly it's to satisfy the ego of Rev Moon. He claims to be saving the world and his evidence is that through the The Washington Times he is influencing America and the world.
I don't know why people want to ignore the obvious and explain Rev Moon as a businessman or a politician, the truth is more frightening, he thinks he's the messiah.
Personally I like my messiahs with a bit more compassion.

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November 14, 2009 3:26 PM   

The Washington Times has always been an interesting paper, even if one-sided, in that some of their reporters would dig up stories not covered by The Post, or elsewhere. The op-ed page carries numerous columnists, a few of them moderate, but many of them out in the Right Wing zoo. The WTimes also had one of the meanest, most vindictive editors,now retired but still writing, in Wesley Pruden. The Times also has Bill Gertz, who had far right wing sources in the Defense Department, and from which rumors of dark doings were pedaled. When I saw the Times every day many years back, I delighted in sending letters to the editors, almost all of them printed, pointing out the errors and nonsense by some of their columnists.

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November 15, 2009 11:15 AM   

Justin,
You referenced the purported expose of the National Iranian American Council as evidence of their continued influence. But there's an interesting wrinkle to that story. Foreign Policy Magazine got ahold of documents that show this really an salvo against President Obama's Iran policy (by attacking those who support him). TPM really should do some muckraking on what appears to be a hit job by the Washington Post:

http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2009/11/13/does_washington_have_an_iran_lobby

Reams of documents were provided to the Times by the defendant in NIAC's defamation lawsuit against Hassan Daioleslam, who they allege has links to identified terrorist groups, and who has been accusing NIAC of being too close to the Iranian government.

Previously unreported documents provided by NIAC to The Cable show that Daioleslam was working with neoconservative author Ken Timmerman as early as 2008 and that their moves on Parsi were part of a larger effort to thwart Obama's Iran policy.

"I strongly believe that Trita Parsi is the weakest part of the Iranian web because he is related to Siamak Namazi and Bob Ney," Daioleslam wrote in one e-mail dated April 2, 2008, "I believe that destroying him will be the start of attacking the whole web. This is an integral part of any attack on Clinton or Obama."

Namazi is a fellow at the National Endowment for Democracy with whom Parsi has worked. The e-mails show that Parsi and Namazi coordinated efforts to make recommendations to administration officials.

Tim Kapshandy, a lawyer for Sidley Austin LLP, came to represent Daioleslam in 2009. Upon seeing the e-mails about Parsi and Namazi, he accidentally sent a note to both of them. The note read, "Send it to [Washington Times reporter Eli] Lake right away!"

"This is not as much targeting us, the end objective seems to be, according to these e-mails, to bring down Obama," Parsi said of the emails in an interview with The Cable.

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