War on terror
Finances of jihad: How extremist groups raise money
Islamic State earns money from oil,
taxation and looting
Twelve months ago, the
group now known as Islamic State (IS) was little recognised on the
international stage beyond those inspired to travel and join the group as
fighters or those in the security and academic worlds monitoring developments
in Syria and Iraq.
Even at its emergence,
it was dismissed as just another of the multitude taking advantage of the chaos
created in Syria by the wide-ranging conflict with President Bashar al-Assad.
In January 2014, US
President Barack Obama downplayed the capabilities and threats posed by those
flying the al-Qaeda flag in Falluja and elsewhere across Iraq and Syria.
But within a few
months, IS controlled a vast and valuable swathe of territory across northern
Syria and Iraq.
Former US Secretary of
Defence Chuck Hagel described IS as being as "sophisticated and
well-funded as any group that we have seen". "They're beyond just a
terrorist group… they are tremendously well funded," he said.
Financing jihadism
Annual income and
sources
·
Islamic State: sale of oil, tolls and
'taxes' $2bn
·
Afghan Taliban: donors, sale of drugs$400m
·
Al-Shabab: sale of charcoal and 'taxes' up to $100m
·
Boko Haram: kidnap for ransom,
fundraising $10m
·
Al Nusra Front: donations, kidnap for
ransom $ unknown
AFP
New
realities
More than with any
other militant group perhaps, the focus of the international community's
attention is on the finances of IS - the revenue it earns from oil, taxation,
extortion and looting.
The US-led coalition
has directed a considerable portion of its air strike effort against the oil
refineries and smuggling routes believed to be the mainstay of the group's
financial survival in the belief that disrupting funding sources will
ultimately precipitate its demise.
The importance of
financing in conflict is as old as conflict itself. The Roman orator Marcus
Tullius Cicero observed that "the sinews of war [are] a limitless supply
of money."
More recently, during
the Cold War, states sponsored political violence by funding and supporting
proxies.
However, the end of
the Cold War, and the use of UN Security Council resolutions against countries
such as Libya and Sudan, saw a dramatic decline in state-sponsored terrorism.
Whilst organisations
such as Hezbollah continue to operate with state backing, post-Cold War
terrorist organisations have mostly been unable to rely on state sponsorship,
thus needing to source their own financing.
Skilful financial
management is at the heart of the success of any terrorist or insurgent
organisation - it represents their lifeblood but is also one of their most
significant vulnerabilities.
Donors
Securing and
maintaining reliable funding is the key to moving from fringe radical group to
recognised terrorist organisation - from a hand-to-mouth existence to a more
planned and organised model.
Successful groups are
often defined as much by their skills as financial managers as they are by
their military expertise and ability to recruit fighters.
In general, terrorist
groups can draw on financing from two primary sources
·
Internally, funds are generated by
taxation of people, businesses and transport routes; proceeds from kidnap and
ransom; and profits from trade
·
External funding is provided by donors
sympathetic to the cause, be they wealthy supporters (often from Gulf state
countries, sometimes referred to as the "Golden Chain") or members of
the diaspora community
Donations are also
sometimes transferred between like-minded terrorist groups. For example, the
Nigerian group Boko Haram reportedly received $250,000 from al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in 2012.
In a letter from 2005,
al-Qaeda's former deputy leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, called upon al-Qaeda in
Iraq to transfer $100,000 (£63,700) because many of its own funding lines had
been cut.
Whilst donations can
provide a source of initial "seed-funding", they are vulnerable to
disruption by the authorities and the supply is unreliable.
To establish financial
independence, terrorist groups need to move from primarily external funding to
internal, self-generated funding that is more difficult for the international
community to disrupt.
Drugs
Al-Shabab in Somalia
is a good case in point. Whilst the group receives some limited funding from
external sources, it has developed a highly effective charcoal export business
which generates up to $80m a year,according to the UN.
Al-Shabab has also
mastered another funding tool - business, personal and transport tax. Like IS,
al-Shabab controls territory and population, operating a form of
quasi-government in the areas under its control - raising taxes and offering
some services, particularly security and justice, in return.
Al-Shabab remains a
potent threat in East Africa
IS promises services
and food supplies to Muslims in areas it controls.
The control of
territory also allows lucrative businesses, such as the growing of opium
poppies in Afghanistan, to flourish.
Over $7bn has been
spent on fighting the drugs trade in the country yet despite 13 years of a
Nato-led effort, poppy cultivation is at an all-time high, with the Taliban
exploiting Afghanistan's position as the supplier of over 90% of global opium
output to earn up to $150m a year.
Poppy farms are flourishing in
Afghanistan
But not all groups
control territory containing populations ripe for taxation and extortion.
Based in the vast,
sparsely inhabited regions across the Sahara and Sahel, AQIM raises its funding
from two main sources
·
Abduction of foreign tourists and
workers for ransom in a trade which is believed to have earned the group close
to $100m over five years
·
Control over smuggling routes for drugs
which are flown in from Latin America along "Highway 10" - referring
to the 10th parallel - as the most direct route across the Atlantic en route to
Europe
The Haqqani Network,
based in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, also relies on smuggling as a
key source of finance.
With its roots in the
opposition to the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, it controls
long-established smuggling routes that benefit from the instability in
Afghanistan and Pakistan to support the funds it raises from its extensive
criminal activity.
Hostage
trade
Kidnap for ransom is
increasingly used by terrorist groups.
Al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which is based in Yemen, is estimated to have earned
$20m this way between 2011 and 2013.
The UN underlines the
profitability of this trade, revealing recently that terrorist groups are
estimated to have earned $120m in ransom payments from 2004-2012.
So if terrorist groups
are to establish themselves, survive and thrive, they need to develop reliable
sources of financing based on the territory, population and resources where
they operate.
That Al-Qaeda in Iraq
(AQI) recognised the critical importance of finance is clear from declassified
documents captured in Iraq following the 2003 invasion in which the group
identified poor money management and irregular income as critical contributors
to the group's failure.
Funding is clearly the
lifeblood of a terrorist organisation. It is also its Achilles' heel.
Since the 9/11
attacks, the international community has sought to disrupt terrorist groups by
targeting their finances.
The first step in US
President George W Bush's so-called "war on terror" was to launch
"a strike on the financial foundation of the global terror network".
Yet, as we are
witnessing across northern Syria and Iraq, starving extremists of financing is
no easy task once they evolve from external reliance to internal
self-sufficiency.
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