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Foreign-Agent Lobbyists Amid Uproars, Duck For Cover

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  • Foreign-Agent Lobbyists Amid Uproars, Duck For Cover

    FOREIGN-AGENT LOBBYISTS AMID UPROARS, DUCK FOR COVER
    By Elana Schor and Roxana Tiron

    The Hill, DC
    March 29 2006

    Corruption at the United Nations. Blowback against Chinese oil moves.

    Hysteria over the Dubai ports deal.

    When members of Congress lash out at a foreign entity, its local
    lobbyists are inevitably caught in the crossfire.

    The domestic lobbying industry makes constant headlines for its huge
    profits and brewing scandals, but the smaller and more secretive
    world of foreign-agent lobbying has begun attracting more than its
    share of attention.

    As the challenges and unanswered questions facing foreign-agent
    lobbyists continue to bleed into the news and influence international
    affairs, lawmakers shaping the lobbying reform debate are finally
    poised to take up the issue.

    The Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) was passed in 1938 to levy
    criminal penalties against Nazi propagandists exploiting the U.S.

    political process before World War II. The law forces strict reporting
    requirements on any individual paid by a foreign government or business
    for lobbying, public relations and advocacy within the United States.

    A growing number of foreign-government-owned businesses, such as
    Dubai Ports World and the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corp.

    (CNOOC), are finding it in their best interests to have American
    lobbyists helping them gain a foothold here.

    In 2005, 455 foreign-agent lobbyists had active registrations working
    with 661 foreign entities, according to Justice Department statistics.

    "It is ridiculous to think that major [state-controlled]
    multinational corporations are not going to have to pay attention
    to the U.S. political process, and they would come up short if they
    didn't," said one lobbyist currently advising foreign governments.

    Like many K Street insiders contacted for this article, the lobbyist
    asked to remain anonymous to speak freely about the nature of
    foreign-agent lobbying without attracting unnecessary attention.

    For foreign-agent lobbyists who thrive on image maintenance, former
    State Department and National Security Council staffer Robert Cabelly
    serves as a cautionary tale. Cabelly's lobbying and PR firm, C/R
    International, has represented African nations struggling with the
    remnants of oppressive regimes, such as Angola and Equatorial Guinea,
    as well as Base Petroleum, a company linked to the late Nigerian
    military dictator Sani Abacha.

    But it was Cabelly's State Department-sanctioned contract to lobby
    for the Sudanese government, which the Bush administration has accused
    of genocide in the Darfur region, that led Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) to
    mount a one-man crusade against the lobbyist.

    "Some things are inappropriate" in the world of foreign-agent lobbying,
    Wolf said in an interview, "but others are more so, particularly if
    it's a former federal official. Doesn't it shock people anymore?"

    Wolf, as chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee with power
    over the State Department's purse strings, was uniquely positioned
    to pressure Foggy Bottom to cut off its support for Cabelly. While a
    spokesman for State initially protested that Cabelly "would provide a
    perspective on United States concerns and policy that would be useful
    in advancing the peace process and resolving the crisis in Darfur,"
    his $530,000 contract was terminated last month.

    Few governments looking for lobbyists to smooth over questionable
    human-rights records have acted as publicly as Sudan.

    Mark Edmond Clark, a former Council on Foreign Relations fellow, signed
    an $18,000, six-month contract to lobby for Iran on the "mission of
    international relations to the United Nations." The contract ended
    last year.

    The brutal ruling junta of Burma dropped its last foreign-agent
    lobbyists, the Republican PR firm DCI Group, in 2003. Neither Syria
    nor North Korea has an active foreign-agent lobbying contract,
    according to Justice Department records.

    "I need to be able to go to sleep at night," said Mark Tavlarides,
    a Van Scoyoc & Associates lobbyist who represents the Pakistan Embassy.

    "You lose your reputation once and that's it. You represent a rogue
    state and, even if you follow the law, it does have an impact on
    your reputation."

    Another international furor over foreign lobbying occurred last year
    in the Philippines, when political foes of embattled President Gloria
    Arroyo pounced on her $75,000-per-month lobbying contract with Venable.

    The Philippine Senate held Arroyo's national-security adviser
    in contempt when he refused to answer questions about the hiring
    of lobbyists Jim Pitts and James Jatras, whose deal asks them to
    "secure grants or congressional earmarks for support of the Charter
    Change initiative" - an Arroyo-backed plan to replace the Philippine
    government with a parliamentary system.

    "You have to take the political culture of each country as you find
    it," said Jatras, who said he worked largely for general military
    assistance to Philippines, not Charter Change. "Each country has
    its own unique political culture and mode of political discourse. It
    seems part of that in the Philippines is people making unsubstantiated
    charges of the most exaggerated kind."

    The Arroyo government yanked Venable's contract after it dominated
    Philippines media, but Jatras and Pitts have since negotiated a more
    flexible deal "generally promoting bilateral relations," Jatras said.

    His foreign-agent lobbying work for India on its pending civilian
    nuclear agreement with the United States continues.

    Rather than defending their own image in a foreign nation, lobbyists
    representing suspicious or even rogue states largely find themselves
    working to improve those governments' reputations with Congress and
    the White House.

    "Their job is hard, but at the same time also fairly easy," said
    another lobbyist who previously worked with foreign agents. "They
    defend the image of the country they represent."

    But countries like Syria or North Korea also face the challenge of
    "finding quality lobbyists that are good at what they are doing and
    willing to take their money," this lobbyist said.

    Ambassador Patrick Theros, the former top U.S. diplomat in Qatar and
    a founding partner of Theros & Theros, last year worked as an adviser
    for Ayad Allawi, then interim prime minister of Iraq.

    "The hardest lesson I learned is convincing a client who does not
    know the United States that the U.S. government is different from
    any other big Western governments and does not speak with one voice,"
    Theros said. "That's almost impossible to sell. ... As a government,
    we are incomprehensible to the outside world."

    Often foreign agent lobbyists have to fight the powers of strong
    grassroots movements. When the Armenian-American community urged
    Congress to adopt human-rights legislation concerning the Armenian
    genocide in Turkey, the Turkish government brought in the Livingston
    Group and its top hired gun, former House Appropriations Committee
    Chairman Bob Livingston (R-La.), to block the bill. Still, the House
    International Relations Committee adopted the measure last year,
    and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is considering it.

    Another part of foreign agents' challenge comes from perceptions that
    are triggered because they have to register with the Department of
    Justice's criminal division.

    "There is almost a negative connotation, like you are pulling something
    and using undue influence in some way," said a lawyer who advises
    several foreign clients on legal and business matters.

    For those not seasoned in the process, such as PR companies hired
    to work on advertising campaigns, registering under FARA comes with
    a stigma.

    "You feel like, 'Oh my God, we are not criminals,'" said a PR
    specialist who, after the Sept. 11 attacks, worked on an ad campaign
    for a strategic Middle Eastern ally.

    One lobbyist working for a friendly Western government described the
    FARA process as "a nightmare" and was reluctant to go through the
    rigorous accounting.

    Because the law's reporting requirements are very strict - every means
    of communications, every meeting has to be detailed - some lobbyists
    actively seek exemptions or loopholes allowing them to register under
    the Lobbying Disclosure Act, which asks for less broad disclosure.

    Wolf said he plans to introduce amendments to the House's lobbying
    reform bill, expected to come to the floor before the April recess,
    prohibiting former senior executive-branch officials from quickly
    profiting off their inside knowledge with foreign-agent deals.

    Five other pending bills aim to bring greater transparency and
    disclosure to the foreign-agent system. Reps. Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio)
    and Joel Hefley (R-Colo.) have called for immediate online disclosure
    of foreign lobbying contracts, while Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio)
    wants to increase the foreign lobbying "revolving door" moratorium
    to five years after leaving office and establish a foreign-agent
    clearinghouse at the Federal Election Commission that would prevent
    overseas cash from influencing U.S. elections.

    Florida GOP Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Mario Diaz-Balart and Lincoln
    Diaz-Balart have introduced a bill that would block former members
    from lobbying on behalf of any nation designated a sponsor of terrorism
    by the State Department.

    Kenneth Gross, a lobbying and ethics lawyer at Skadden Arps, echoed
    complaints from foreign agents that the criminal statute governing
    their behavior has a chilling effect. FARA should be revamped as a
    civil statute, similar to the Lobbying Disclosure Act, Gross said.

    Van Scoyoc's Tavlarides said foreign-agent lobbyists have nothing
    to fear from FARA transparency: "Our firm represents the government
    of Pakistan and we are proud to represent them. If you are doing the
    right thing and are interacting with foreign governments, you should
    not have to hide it."

    Those who violate the FARA regulations have to pay hefty fines and
    risk up to five years in prison. The Justice Department also can
    seek an injunction that would bar violators from acting as a foreign
    agent for a certain amount of time, according to department spokesman
    Bryan Sierra.
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