CANNES, France — A massive police force will be guarding the Cannes Film Festival
this year. But the only scuffle on the horizon may come in response to the
right-wing producers of a devastating new documentary about Bill and Hillary
Clinton’s alleged influence peddling and favor-trading. That film, “Clinton
Cash,” screens here May 16 and opens in the U.S. on July 24 — just before
the Democratic National Convention.
The allegations are as brazen as
they are controversial: What other film at Cannes would come up with a plot
that involves Russian President Vladimir Putin wrangling a deal with the
alleged help of both Clintons, a Canadian billionaire, Kazakhstan mining
officials and the Russian atomic energy agency — all of which resulted in Putin
gaining control of 20 percent of all the uranium in the U.S.?
MSNBC got
an exclusive first look at “Clinton Cash,” the flashy, hour-long film version
of conservative author Peter Schweizer’s surprise 2015 bestseller, which The
New York Times called the “the most anticipated and feared book of a
presidential cycle.” The Washington Post said that ”on any fair
reading, the pattern of behavior that Schweizer has charged is corruption.”
Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager John Podesta denounced the
book as a bunch of “outlandish claims” with “zero evidence.”
The film
portrays the Clintons as a greedy tag team who used the family’s controversial
Clinton Foundation and her position as secretary of state to help billionaires
make shady deals around the world with corrupt dictators, all while enriching
themselves to the tune of millions.
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The movie alleges that Bill
Clinton cut a wide swathe through some of the most impoverished and corrupt
areas of the world — the South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo,
Colombia, India and Haiti among others — riding in on private jets with
billionaires who called themselves philanthropists but were actually bent on
plundering the countries and lining their own pockets.
In return, billionaire pals like Frank Giustra and
Gilbert
Chagoury, or high-tech companies like Swedish telecom giant
Ericsson or Indian nuclear energy officials — to name just a few mentioned
in the film — hired Clinton to speak at often $750,000 a pop, according to
“Clinton Cash.” When a favor was needed at the higher levels of the Obama
administration to facilitate some of the deals, Hillary Clinton was only
willing to sign off on them, the movie reports.
As a film, it powerfully connects
the dots — whether you believe them or not — in a narrative that lacks
the wonkiness of the book, which bore a full title of “The Untold Story of How
and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich.”
It packs the kind of Trump-esque
mainstream punch that may have the presumptive GOP nominee salivating. He recently
declared, “We’ll whip out that book because that book will become
very pertinent.”
The hour-long documentary is
intercut with “Homeland”-style clips of the Clintons juxtaposed against shots
of blood-drenched money, radical madrassas, villainous dictators and private
jets, all set to sinister music.
Produced by
Stephen K. Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News, with Schweizer as
the film’s talking head, the documentary might be easy to dismiss as just
another example of the “vast right-wing conspiracy” the former secretary of
state referenced so many years ago.
But what
complicates matters for Hillary Clinton’s campaign is that the book resulted in
a series of investigations last year into Schweizer’s allegations by mainstream
media organizations from The New York Times and CNN to The Washington
Post and The Wall Street Journal, many of which did not dispute his
findings — and in some cases gathered more material that the producers used in
the film. More recently, some information uncovered in the Panama Papers has
echoed some of Schweitzer’s allegations in the movie and book.
watch now
ANDREA MITCHELL REPORTS, 5/1/15,
12:43 PM ET
‘Clinton Cash’ author responds to
criticism
The Clinton campaign loudly
denounced the book as a “smear project” last year and Schweizer’s publisher,
the Murdoch-owned Harper Collins, had to make some corrections to the Kindle
version. But the changes, in the end, involved seven or eight inaccuracies,
some of which were fairly minor in the context of the larger allegations, Politico reported.
Neither the Clinton campaign nor
the Clinton Foundation responded to calls and emails requesting comment about
the film Tuesday.
One of the most damning
follow-ups to Schweizer’s most startling accusation — that Vladimir Putin wound
up controlling 20 percent of American uranium after a complex series of deals
involving cash flowing to the Clinton Foundation and the help of Secretary of
State Clinton — was printed in The
New York Times.
Like Schweizer, the Times
found no hard evidence in the form of an email or any document proving a quid
pro quo between the Clintons, Clinton Foundation donors or Russian officials.
(Schweizer has maintained that it’s next to impossible to find a smoking gun
but said there is a troubling “pattern of behavior” that merits a closer
examination.)
But the Times
concluded that the deal that brought Putin closer to his goal of
controlling all of the world’s uranium supply is an “untold story … that
involves not just the Russian president, but also a former American president
and a woman who would like to be the next one.”
“Other news outlets built on what
I uncovered and some of that is in the film,” Schweizer, a former speechwriter
for President George W. Bush, told NBC News Tuesday. “To me the key message is
that while U.S. politics has long been thought to be a dirty game, it was
always played by Americans. What the Clinton Foundation has done is open an
avenue by which foreign investors can influence a chief U.S. diplomat. The film
may spell all this out to people in a way the book did not and it may reach a
whole new audience.”
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