Combating Terrorist Financing: Where the War on Terror Intersects the “Road Map” (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER PUBLIC AFFAIRS) Jerusalem Issue Brief Vol. 3, No. 4 by Matthew Levitt 08/14/03)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/brief/brief3-4.htm
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Combating terrorist financing is one of the most critical fronts
in both the war on terror and the implementation of the roadmap to
peace. In both cases, cutting off the flow of funds to terrorists
hinges on focusing on logistical and financial support networks.
Too often security, intelligence, and law enforcement services –
and certainly politicians and diplomats – make distinctions between
terrorist “operatives” and terrorist “supporters.” Yet financial and
logistical support networks are central to the conduct of
international terrorism. Those who fund or facilitate acts of terror
are equally as guilty of committing acts of terror as those who pull
the triggers, detonate the bombs, or crash the airplanes.
The main effort in combating terror financing must be to shut
down the key nodes through which terrorists raise, launder, and
transfer funds.
Since there is significant overlap between terrorist groups in
the area of financing, failure to deal with the financing of groups
like Hamas undermines efforts to stem the flow of funds to al-Qaeda.
Pundits and politicians alike tend to think of the war on terror
against al-Qaeda and the terrorist groups threatening the Arab-
Israeli peace process as completely separate phenomena. This is, in
part, a logical supposition, as neither Hamas nor Hizballah belong to
the family of al-Qaeda-associated terrorist groups. Hizballah and
Palestinian terrorist groups do not conduct joint operational
activity with al-Qaeda and, despite some ad hoc cooperation and
personal relationships, they have no official or institutional links.
There have been a few cases of Hamas operatives who attended al-Qaeda
training camps or had other links to al-Qaeda personnel and were
dispatched to conduct attacks in Israel. Far more significant,
however, are the longstanding links between al-Qaeda and groups like
Hamas at the level of their international logistical and financial
support networks.
Networks and relationships best describe the current state of
international terrorism. This matrix of relationships among
terrorists of various groups is what makes the threat of
international terrorism so dangerous today. For example, while there
are no known organizational links between al-Qaeda and Hizballah, the
two groups have held senior level meetings over the past decade and
there have been ad hoc, person-to-person ties in the areas of
training and logistical support.
Too often people insist on pigeonholing terrorists as members of one
group or another, as if such operatives carry membership cards in
their wallets. In reality, much of the “network of networks” that
characterizes today’s terrorist threat is informal and unstructured.
Not every al-Qaeda operative has pledged an oath of allegiance to
Osama bin Laden, while many terrorists maintain affiliations with
members of other terrorist groups and facilitate one another’s
activities. This applies to Palestinian terrorist groups as well.
In the area of terrorist financing and logistical support there is
significant overlap between terrorist groups.
Both Logistical and Financial Supporters of Terrorism are Terrorists
September 11 taught several painful lessons, not the least of which
is that those who conduct such support activities are terrorists of
the same caliber as those who carry out attacks. Indeed, the key
ingredient that enabled September 11 to happen was the fact that so
many individuals and organizations were able to provide the kind of
financial and logistical support for an operation of that magnitude.
This is able to occur when security, intelligence, and law
enforcement services – and certainly politicians and diplomats – make
distinctions between terrorist “operatives” and
terrorist “supporters.” Several of the September 11 plotters had been
defined prior to September 11 as merely terrorist “supporters,”
not “operatives.” Thus it is critical that intelligence agencies
focus on the logistical and financial supporters of terrorism, not
only because they facilitate acts of terror, but because
distinguishing between “supporters” and “operatives” assures that the
plotters of the next terrorist attack – today’s “supporters” – will
only be identified after they conduct their terrorist attack – and
are thus transformed into “operatives.” Those who fund or facilitate
acts of terrorism are no less terrorists than those who carry out the
operation by pulling the trigger, detonating the bomb, or crashing
the airplane. September 11 should have taught us how financial and
logistical support networks are central to the conduct of
international terrorism. Any serious effort to crack down on
terrorist financing, so critical to disrupt terrorist activity,
demands paying special attention to these support networks.
A close examination of these networks reveals that there are key
nodes in this matrix that have become the preferred conduits used by
terrorists from multiple terrorist groups to fund and facilitate
attacks. Shutting down these organizations, front companies, and
charities will go a long way toward stemming the flow of funds to and
among terrorist groups.
Shut Down the Key Nodes of Funding
Many critics of the economic war on terrorism suggest that because
the amount of money that has been frozen internationally is in the
low millions, very little has actually been accomplished. I suggest
that the dollar amount frozen is not the issue; the issue is shutting
down the key nodes through which terrorists raise, launder, and
transfer funds.
Counterterrorism is not about defeating terrorism; it is about
constricting the operating environment – making it harder for them to
do what they want to do at every level: conducting operations,
procuring and transferring false documents, ferrying fugitives from
one place to another; financing, raising, and laundering funds. It is
about making it more difficult for terrorists to conduct their
operational, logistical, and financial activities.
To constrict the terrorists’ operating environment and crack down on
terrorist financing, let us consider a few examples of key nodes in
the network of terrorist logistical support groups. Many of these
organizations are not particular to one terrorist group:
· Bank al Taqwa: One of the first financial institutions shut down by
the United States after September 11 was a family of financial
institutions known as Bank al Taqwa. Announcing the seizure of al
Taqwa’s funds, President Bush noted that al Taqwa and its various
affiliates in the United States and abroad were not only being used
to raise funds for al-Qaeda, but as a key means for transferring and
laundering those funds and even for transferring military and other
equipment to al-Qaeda operatives internationally.
Bank al Taqwa provided similar services to many other terrorist
groups. In 1997 Hamas used Bank al Taqwa to transfer as much as $60
million that it raised internationally to the West Bank and Gaza. The
Italians subsequently came forward with information that Bank al
Taqwa was servicing several North African groups that now play a more
central role in al-Qaeda.
· IIRO: One of the chief Saudi Arabian charities definitively linked
to financing a variety of international terrorist groups is the
International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO). The IIRO has funded
al-Qaeda directly, as well as several of its satellite groups from
Kashmir to the Philippines. Bin Laden’s brother-in-law, Mohammed
Jamal Khalifa, headed the organization’s office in the Philippines,
and the organization’s office in northern Virginia shared office
space with about 50 other financial shell organizations that are now
the subject of a massive counterterrorism investigation. Israeli
forces found a large collection of documents in the West Bank with
the IIRO logo including several lists of aid recipients with the
names of families of suicide bombers highlighted. The IIRO has sent
at least $280,000 to Hamas-affiliated organizations in the West Bank.
Saudis authorities like to talk about bad apples that have fallen off
good trees and, in fact, that is sometimes the case. For many months
the Saudis maintained this argument regarding the al Haramain Islamic
Foundation. Each time the United States approach the Saudis about
another branch of al Haramain that had been definitively linked to
financing not only terrorism in general but specific terror
operations the Saudis would write the office off as another bad apple
off an otherwise good tree. But sometimes the tree itself is bad, and
every so often the forest is rotten.
· The Madrid Cell: Perhaps the most significant al-Qaeda cell to be
broken up since 9/11 is not the Hamburg cell but the one in Madrid,
Spain. A member of the Madrid cell provided pre-operational
surveillance of the Twin Towers, several bridges in New York and
California, and other sites during a supposed tourist visit to the
U.S. in the late 1990s. The Madrid cell also provided much of the
financing for key members of the Hamburg cell directly, even as it
funded other cells and other groups. For example, the leader of the
Madrid cell sent money to a charity committee in Hebron that American
and Israeli officials both linked to Hamas, and provided money to an
imam in Madrid with known ties to Hamas.
· Al Aqsa International Foundation: After significant pressure and
lobbying by both Israeli and American authorities, several individual
European countries (but not the European Union) have joined the
United States in banning the al Aqsa International Foundation, a
Hamas front organization which is also suspected of sending money to
Hizballah. The head of the foundation’s office in Yemen was arrested
in Germany – not for fundraising on behalf of Hamas but for sending
weapons and millions of dollars to al-Qaeda operatives well after
September 11.
Indeed, a careful look at the relationships between terrorists from
various groups reveals that most of the overlap between groups occurs
at key nodes within a matrix of financial and logistical support
networks.
Recently disclosed Italian telephone wiretaps reveal that al-Qaeda
associates in Italy and elsewhere in Europe were radicalizing and
recruiting local Muslim youth to engage in terrorist training at the
Ansar al-Islam training camp in the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq
near the Iranian border. Recruits were sent via Syria, where the
European operatives’ al-Qaeda commanders were located – likely with
the knowledge of the Syrian government.
In one conversation, a senior individual in Syria offers his
lieutenant in Italy a series of instructions on how to evade the
counterterrorism measures put in place since 9-11. He gave very
specific advice on how long to stay on the phone, what type of phone
to use, not to use the Internet, where to hold meetings, and where
not to hold meetings. The commander in Syria added that they need not
worry about money “because Saudi Arabia’s money is your money.”
These examples show that terrorist support networks are very often
intertwined. Operationally, failure to crack down on the financing of
Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hizballah will only undermine
the larger war on terror.
The Majority of Hamas Funding Comes from Saudi Arabia
The fact that Hamas is the only organization providing Palestinians
with critical social services does not excuse the group’s terrorist
activity. Hamas uses the same institutions to finance suicide
bombings and help the needy. In the schools it funds, the classrooms
are decorated with posters of suicide bombers and slogans inciting
the children to violence.
It costs a tremendous amount of money to maintain the Hamas dawa, the
social welfare infrastructure which Hamas utilizes to facilitate
terror attacks, as well as to build grassroots support among the
Palestinian population. Frequently, Hamas dawa operatives are the
ones who ferry the suicide bomber and the explosives to the point of
departure for the mission. Numerous Hamas members with terrorist
track records are officials of Hamas charity committees.
Recent assessments indicate that the majority of Hamas funding
currently comes from sources within Saudi Arabia. Sources like the
International Islamic Relief Organization are just one step removed
from the Saudi government as subsidiaries of the Muslim World League –
a pseudo-governmental agency. Hamas also gets money from Iran and
elsewhere in the Muslim world, as well as from North America and
Europe.
Islamic Jihad is practically a wholly-owned subsidiary of Iran,
serving Iranian foreign policy. Iran used to fund Islamic Jihad
through its budget for Hizballah, which is said to receive at least
$100 million a year. However, about a year into the latest intifada,
Iran separated Islamic Jihad’s budget from Hizballah, and increased
it by 75 percent.
Neither al-Qaeda, Hamas, nor Islamic Jihad currently lack for money,
and this situation will continue until we do something about it. In
the context of both the war on terror and the roadmap to peace,
failure to effectively combat the financing of terrorist groups will
translate into nothing less than our failure to combat terror and
secure peace in the Middle East.
Matthew Levitt is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy. This Jerusalem Issue Brief is based on his
presentation at the Institute for Contemporary Affairs in Jerusalem
on July 17, 2003.
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