evangelist” by The New Republic and “the next Billy Graham” by the New York Times.
Indeed, Paul tells me, the seemingly deserted building is GPI’s office.
Quite the humble environs for a man who says his charity and peace work
has reached 148 countries, hundreds of thousands of orphans and widows
in need, and the millions of people who have attended his peace rallies.
Global media have reported on how he convinced Liberian dictator
Charles Taylor to resign and persuaded Haitian rebel leader Guy Philippe
to lay down his arms. Also in Paul’s travel log: meetings with late
Libyan dictator Muammar al-Gaddafi, former Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, and late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
After I enter the facility with K.A. Paul, what follows is a wide-ranging interview with someone who is best described as an international man of mystery. That man is also staunchly pro-Israel, which might surprise you given the aforementioned characters he has met with. His mission last summer: defeat the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers. His current mission: muster the power of America’s 90 million evangelical Christians to
help defeat Democratic contender Hillary Clinton in the 2016 American presidential election.
After I enter the facility with K.A. Paul, what follows is a wide-ranging interview with someone who is best described as an international man of mystery. That man is also staunchly pro-Israel, which might surprise you given the aforementioned characters he has met with. His mission last summer: defeat the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers. His current mission: muster the power of America’s 90 million evangelical Christians to
help defeat Democratic contender Hillary Clinton in the 2016 American presidential election.
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