First, a little background:
The Washington Times has lost money every year that it has been in business. By 2002, the Unification Church had spent about $1.7 billion subsidizing its operation of the Times. In 2003, The New Yorker reported that a billion dollars had been spent since the paper's inception, as Moon himself had noted in a 1991 speech, "Literally nine hundred million to one billion dollars has been spent to activate and run the Washington Times". In 2002, Columbia Journalism Review suggested Moon had spent nearly $2 billion on the Times. In 2008, Thomas F. Roeser of the Chicago Daily Observer mentioned competition from the Times as a factor moving the Washington Post to the right, and said that Moon had "announced he will spend as many future billions as is needed to keep the paper competitive."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Washington_Times#FundingThis article from an actual newspaper clears up the mystery:
In addition to facing the declining economic fortunes that have hit vitually all newspapers, the Times is caught in the middle of a battle for control of Moon's vast business empire, as the church founder's grown children have been dueling over who will run Moon's real estate and fishing concerns. The father gave the Times to Preston, his oldest son, in 2006, according to former Times officials.
Tensions between Preston and his younger brother, Justin Moon, ignited last year, according to church and Times sources, after Preston tried to gain control of another church-supported company, UCI, which has about $3 billion in real estate and fishing assets. In retaliation, Justin, who runs many of the family's businesses in South Korea and Japan, slashed the Times's annual $35 million subsidy, forcing the paper into a series of layoffs.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/24/AR2010082406128.htmlPreston wasn't content to just play newspaper guy, but greedy Justin is not inclined to share. So he cut off the gravy train that had been keeping Preston's loser newspaper afloat since its inception.
Now Preston is threatening to shut down the Times altogether. But 90 year old Daddy Moon wants to keep the propaganda going at any cost, and that's why he's interested in buying the Times back from Preston.