McCain’s Friends
Revelations About John McCain’s Advisers’ Ties to Shady Regimes Were Noted by the Center in 1992
BY Caitlin Ginley | May 14, 2008
While Republican John McCain has severed ties with two campaign advisers who lobbied for the military junta in Myanmar, connections between his staffers and oppressive foreign regimes still exist and date back more than a decade.

The Center for Public Integrity’s 1992 report, “The Torturers’ Lobby,” reveals that Black and Manafort have a long history of lobbying on behalf of foreign governments, taking in millions of dollars in hefty fees from the torturers, human rights abusers, and tyrants they called clients. In 1991 and 1992 alone, the firm Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly Public Affairs Co. collected more than $3 million for representing Nigeria, Kenya, the Philippines, and Angola’s UNITA rebel group, headed by Jonas Savimbi, who allegedly tortured and murdered his enemies.
A spokesman for the firm told the Center at the time that the firm tried “to open a dialogue” when it came to human rights issues, but that Black himself did not advise foreign clients.
Read the Center’s full 1992 report here.
Read the Center’s interviews with Charlie Black, Rick Davis, and Paul Manafort.



