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FBI Investigates Saudi Propaganda

Newsweek reports that the feds are investigating whether Qorvis deceptively financed an advertising campaign promoting a 2002 peace plan by Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah (pictured left). Federal prosecutors are seeking to determine whether the Saudi…

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PrinceabdullahNewsweek reports that the feds are investigating whether Qorvis deceptively financed an advertising campaign promoting a 2002 peace plan by Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah (pictured left).

Federal prosecutors are seeking to determine whether the Saudi Embassy’s PR firm, Qorvis Communications, made false statements to the Justice Department and violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA)—a 1938 law requiring full disclosure of foreign-sponsored propaganda in the United States, according to sources familiar with grand-jury subpoenas issued in the case.

The probe into the 2002 radio ad campaign supposedly paid for by an obscure group called the Alliance for Peace and Justice, explains last week’s startling raid by the FBI on the downtown Washington offices of Qorvis, a well-connected PR group that began representing the Saudis in the aftermath of the September 11 terror attacks.

Even as the ads were broadcasting, the Boston Phoenix connected the dots between the Alliance, Qorvis, and the Saudis:

Must be just another grassroots group fighting to get Israel out of the West Bank, right? Not exactly. The ads were placed by Sandler-Innocenzi, a political-advertising agency that has done spots for Republican House majority whip Tom DeLay and the Republican National Committee, among others. A Sandler-Innocenzi staffer contacted by the Phoenix acknowledged involvement with the ad and gave a phone number and address for the Alliance of Peace and Justice. The address — 8484 Westpark Drive in McLean, Virginia — is the home of media firm Qorvis Communications. Where does this complicated trail lead? To the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which, according to the federal government’s Foreign Agents Registration Act office, hired Qorvis on March 6. Qorvis did not respond to phone calls requesting comment on the ads.

Readers might recall the crown prince’s plan got off to a rocky start because he used NY Times columnist Thomas Friedman to float the initiative.

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