Picture the scene.
It was a quiet night in June 1985 in the equatorial heat of Jamba, a
small town in the heartland of Angola, the oil and diamond rich African
nation that was divided by a bloody civil war for 30 years. Jamba at the
time was a base for Jonas’ Savimbi’s Unita movement, a tribal
secessionist army bizarrely funded, at the same time, by Communist China
and the CIA.
A top-secret meeting was then underway between Savimbi and his boosters
led by a young American Republican activist, none other than Jack
Abramoff, a man who could bring down the current GOP Administration. He
was there representing an organization he founded, the International
Freedom Foundation. Abramoff, and others disguised their identities. His
code name was “Pacman.”
Also present, a South African newspaper reports, “Leaders of the Afghan
mujahedin, Nicaraguan contras, Laotian guerrillas and members of the
Oliver North American right." (Could a Bin Laden operative have been
there with the CIA-backed Afghan delegation? There’s no evidence of that
yet.)
Unita’s strongman, the late Jonas Savimbi, who fancied calling himself
Dr. Savimbi, was a masterful guerilla fighter who became the darling of
the American right wing as it rallied to the cause of Unita’s main ally,
racist South Africa. Conservatives dubbed him a freedom fighter,
heralding him as their Che Guevara. In the end 600,000 people, mostly
civilians would die in this bloody conflict, many as result of
atrocities perpetuated by Unita. (I reported from Angola in that period
and can confirm it was an awful bloodletting with cities like Lubongo
destroyed and thousands displaced.)
Abramoff’s trip to Angola had been paid for by right-wing New York
financier Lewis Lehrman as part of an effort to create a global
anti-communist alliance. (Lehrman later fired Abramoff, who would go on
to become the most notorious lobbyist in America, for inflating his
expense reports, a portent of corrupt practices to come.)
Abramoff, an ultra-orthodox Jew recalled an incident when he left the
meeting to pray alone in the bush. “They thought, I was a 'mystic,'" he
would later write.
There was nothing mystical about the US policies Abramoff was then
covertly advancing.
According to the Wikipedia:
“In 1986, Savimbi was invited by U.S. President Ronald Reagan to the
White House. Reagan spoke of UNITA winning 'a victory that electrifies
the world.... Equally important, Savimbi was strongly supported by the
extremely influential Heritage Foundation. Heritage Foundation foreign
policy analyst Michael Johns and other conservatives visited regularly
with Savimbi in his clandestine camps in southern Angola and provided
the rebel leader with ongoing political and military guidance in his war
against the Angolan government.
“Savimbi's U.S.-based supporters ultimately proved successful in
convincing the Central Intelligence Agency to channel covert weapons to
Savimbi's war against Angola's Marxist government, which greatly
intensified the conflict.”
This early period in Abramoff’s career has been largely ignored in most
of the American media. It was the period in which he began building
relations with tribal people, a practice he would parlay later becoming
a very well compensated lobbyist for corrupt American Indian tribes in
the lucrative gambling industry.
His fascination with Africa would lead to a lobbying contract for the
Congo’s Mobutu Seso Seko, a Savimbi supporter and then the richest and
most corrupt dictator on the continent. Mobutu, critics charged, ran a
“kleptocracy” based on the violent suppression of human rights while
Abramoff represented him.
Abramoff would later be accused of becoming a kleptocrat in his own
right. Apparently, he never just served others. He was always more
ambitious and avaricious than that.
He saw a chance to make a name and big money for himself with the help
of apartheid South Africa. Rocked by uprisings in the townships and
challenged by the artists who backed a cultural boycott of South
Africa’s “Sun City”, the top gambling resort and entertainment venue,
Apartheid’s rulers decided to fight back against the likes of activists,
like singer Little Steven Van Zandt, by channeling state funds into
media projects they could
later deny they were linked with.
Jack Abramoff had actually first visited South Africa in 1983, as head
of the College Republicans National Committee (CRNC). South Africa’s
Mail and Guardian reported on February 10, 2006: “The IFF was officially
headquartered in Washington, where the South Africans were given entrée
into the American political establishment by Abramoff and the Young
Republicans. But, it was effectively run from Johannesburg… Newsday
reported that the Johannesburg office was 'the nerve centre' of IFF
operations worldwide.”
Ambramoff then enlisted in South Africa’s cultural war and suddenly
found himself sitting pretty as the head of Hollywood movie studio
called Regency Enterprises. The idea was to make anti-communist films
that could denigrate the anti-apartheid movement. Poof, Jack became a
credited screenwriter.
The movie was “Red Scorpion” starring the very Aryan-looking Dolph
Lundgren. It pictured African liberation fighters as surrogates for
Soviet totalitarians. The plot: “A Russian KGB agent is sent to Africa
to kill an anti-Communist black revolutionary.” The tagline: “He's a
human killing machine. Taught to stalk. Trained to kill. Programmed to
destroy. He's played by their rules... Until now.”
Jack Ambramoff’s alter ego and fantasy was now on the screen.
The movie was made in South African-occupied Namibia. It was denounced
by Hollywood supporters of the cultural boycott like Martin Scorcese,
Spike Lee and Robert DeNiro for supporting apartheid. Other critics
called it “homoerotic” and "over patriotic.” He later executive produced
a sequel, "Red Scorpion 2."
Ambramoff has a pattern of first denying sleazy practices until forced
to admit them. At first, he publicly denied South African financing.
This past week the Mail & Guardian quotes one-time apartheid spy Craig
Williamson as now admitting that the money came directly from the South
African military:
“Among Abramoff’s South African projects was the anti-communist film Red
Scorpion, made in South African-occupied Namibia and, according to
Williamson, funded by the South African military.”
Why the military? The newspaper reveals: “The IFF was ostensibly founded
as a conservative think-tank, but was in reality part of an elaborate
South African military intelligence operation, code-named Operation
Babushka. Established to combat sanctions and undermine the African
National Congress, it also supported Jonas Savimbi and his rebel Angolan
movement, Unita.”
The movie was modeled romantically on Savimbi’s “War for Freedom” but
also riddled with stereotypes and crude propaganda.
Sample exchange: “Colonel Zayas: Are you out of your mind?
Lt. Nikolai: "No. Just out of bullets. xxxs[Burps].” (Click here to
watch the trailer)
Abramoff turned to his connections and procured a Soviet-made WWII-era
T-34 tank with a 76mm canon for the final battle sequence.
An amateur reviewer posted an insightful comment on a film website which
may have foreseen the off-screen drama that Ambramoff himself is now
starring in. “Looking beyond the mindless action scenes (which, despite
the countless guns and explosions), there is a good fable about the
possibility of manipulating truth, and how appearance is not always truth.”
Another citizen-reviewer noted, ”Yes, the same man who bribed over 60
congressmen and senators, robbed several native American tribes blind,
tried to take out life insurance policies on tribal elders with himself
as the beneficiary, and called the Choctaw tribal council 'Monkeys' and
'troglodytes,' had an interesting earlier career.
“He was disqualified from the student government election in his Beverly
Hills elementary school for exceeding spending limits. He took over the
young Republican movement in college with his schoolmates including
Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition, and longtime republican insider
Grover Norquist.”
Last week, pictures of Abramoff and President Bush, photos whose
existence was first denied by the White House, turned up on the
internet. Yes, they knew each other and met several times. Ambramoff
claims Karl Rove was his buddy.
Still to come are images of Abramoff on his African “liberation” safari
taking up the white man’s burden in the name of discrediting Nelson
Mandela. The African National Congress leader’s freedom was demanded by
millions at the time, with the exception of politicians like then
Congressman Dick Cheney who voted against a Congressional resolution
calling for Mandela’s release from prison. (Cheney also opposed
overturning Ronald Reagan’s ban on sanctions against South Africa, a ban
Jack Ambramoff personally worked in Hollywood to support as a Pretoria
funded agent.)
Don’t you think there must be a photo somewhere of young Jack with South
Africa’s apartheid-era President, P.W. “The Crocodile” Botha. Putting
those two presidential trophy shots side by side, Botha on one side,
Bush on the other, will complete this connection between the ongoing
fight for truth and racial justice and the Bush Administration’s
commitment to “Abramoff Family Values” (AFW) designed to enrich “just
us.” (The LA Times has since reported that Ambramoff considered Karl
Rove a friend.)
RawStory.com which is carrying a version of this report asked
Ambramoff’s lawyer about its contentions. His response: a denial.
“Andrew Blum, a spokesman for Abramoff, denied that Abramoff had ever
supported apartheid and called any such implications 'false and
defamatory.'"
"It is untrue that Jack Abramoff ever supported apartheid," Blum said in
an email. "As the media at the time reflected, Mr. Abramoff's
involvement in the Washington office of IFF occurred in the mid-1980s,
was short-lived, and was when IFF came out against apartheid and for the
release of Nelson Mandella. In fact, Mr. Abramoff was criticized at the
time in pro-South African government circles for these positions. Mr.
Abramoff did no work to advance the agenda of the South African
apartheid government."
He added, "Mr. Abramoff's anti-apartheid positions were clear and never
contradicted in any forum. Any suggestion, implication or reporting that
Mr. Abramoff was ever pro-apartheid or working for the interests of the
South African government are false and defamatory."
“News Dissector” Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. He was the
Executive Producer of the public television series “South Africa Now” and helped produce the Sun City album with 54 top musicians. Email to: dissector@mediachannel.org
© 2006 MediaChannel.org
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