According to a
Newsday article entitled "Front for Apartheid: Washington-based
think-tank said to be part of ruse to prolong power" of July 16, 1995, the IFF was alleged to have been funded by
apartheid South Africa in the amount of $1.5 million per year from 1986. In return for this funding, South Africa was said to have used the IFF as an instrument to portray the
African National Congress (ANC) together with its leaders,
Oliver Tambo and the imprisoned
Nelson Mandela, as terrorists and as sympathetic to Soviet communism. Code-named
Operation Babushka, the IFF succeeded in recruiting a large number of Republican politicians and conservative intellectuals to influence US policies towards the apartheid regime, and to counteract growing domestic and international pressure for the imposition of economic sanctions against South Africa. The IFF's first chairman was Duncan Sellars. Its Washington lobbyist/film producer,
Jack Abramoff, was said by
Newsday to have recruited willing—but perhaps unwitting—Republican politicians including: Senator
Jesse Helms; Rep.
Dan Burton; Rep.
Philip Crane; Rep.
Robert Dornan; and
Alan Keyes. None of these five politicians—and neither Sellars nor Abramoff—admitted to being aware of any South African funding. Had they known that they were effectively working to further the interests of a foreign government, they would have been required under US law to register as a
foreign agent with the
Justice Department. In apparent support of the politicians' denial, a former member of SA's Directorate of Military Intelligence, Major
Craig Williamson, told
Newsday that
Operation Babushka was designed so that the people it recruited would be unaware of the foreign funding—they would simply be reinforcing their own principled views on South Africa and the ANC. But, in relation to Jack Abramoff—who produced a South African-funded movie
Red Scorpion in
South-West Africa (now
Namibia) in 1988—Williamson indicated that Abramoff would undoubtedly have known about the source of the IFF's funding. Another former SA intelligence official, Colonel Vic McPherson, declared to
Newsday how pleased he was with the performance of the IFF: "They were not just good in intelligence, but in political warfare." In 1992, under pressure from
Nelson Mandela, funding for the IFF was withdrawn by President
F. W. de Klerk and it closed down the following year. Vic McPherson and Craig Williamson spoke to
Newsday before the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act became law on July 26, 1995, and therefore before South Africa's
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) began its case hearings in April 1996. McPherson and Williamson (along with seven others) applied for and were eventually granted TRC amnesty in 1999 for participating in the bombing in March 1982 of the ANC offices in London. ==London UK office==