The Foreign Interference Scandal Nobody Wants to Talk About

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For nearly a decade foreign interference in American elections dominated cable news coverage, congressional hearings, and political debate. Many warned that foreign money and influence posed a serious threat to democracy.Yet one of the most significant proven cases of foreign money entering American politics has received comparatively little attention. Prakazrel “Pras” Michel, the Grammy winning member of the band The Fugees, has now begun serving a 14 year federal prison sentence after a jury convicted him on ten criminal counts arising from an international influence operation tied to fugitive Malaysian financier Jho Low.This is not speculation, opposition research, or a conspiracy theory. It is the conclusion reached by federal prosecutors, a federal jury, and a federal judge.Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.According to evidence presented at trial, Michel became involved with Jho Low, the central figure in the infamous 1MDB scandal, one of the largest financial fraud schemes in modern history. Prosecutors established that Michel received enormous sums connected to Low and helped facilitate the movement of foreign money into American politics through a network of straw donors designed to conceal the true source of the funds. Federal law prohibits foreign nationals from contributing money to American elections because elections are supposed to be decided by Americans, not wealthy foreign interests seeking influence over government.Prosecutors argued that millions of dollars connected to Low were funneled through intermediaries and ultimately benefited Barack Obama’s 2012 reelection effort. Imagine if the political parties involved had been reversed. If a prominent entertainer allied with Republicans had been convicted of helping channel foreign money into a Republican presidential campaign, and the foreign financier involved had been tied to a major international corruption scandal, the story likely would have generated far more sustained coverage. Instead, the case received limited attention compared with many other allegations of foreign influence. That does not mean Barack Hussein Obama was charged with a crime. He was not. There is no evidence that Obama personally directed or knowingly participated in the scheme. Those distinctions matter and should be acknowledged. However one must also consider the old saying, “You’re known by the company you keep”.What cannot be ignored is the larger lesson. Foreign interference is wrong regardless of who benefits. If Americans are serious about protecting election integrity, the standard must apply equally to everyone. Foreign money flowing into any campaign is wrong. Secret lobbying on behalf of foreign interests is wrong. Using straw donors to disguise the source of political contributions is wrong.The Pras Michel case exposed an uncomfortable reality: foreign influence operations are not confined to one political party, ideology, or election cycle. They remain a persistent risk wherever money, power, and access intersect. That is why this case deserves to be remembered; not because it confirms a partisan narrative, but because it demonstrates that the problem is real and that one of the men convicted for participating in it is now serving fourteen years in federal prison. Given the years of attention devoted to foreign interference, it is notable how little discussion this proven example has generated among many commentators.Thanks for reading Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone! This post is public so feel free to share it.Share