Title: Chapter Five: Financing Terrorism
1Chapter FiveFinancing Terrorism
2The Importance of Funding
3The Importance of Funding
- James Adams
- Another method for attacking terrorism was that
governments needed to stop the flow of money - Financing of Terror Terrorism changed between
the 1960s and the 1980s and most Western Defense
policies failed to account for the change - PLO
- Established an economic wing called Samed in 1970
- Samed developed into a rational business structure
4The Importance of Funding
- Provisional IRA- Capone Discovery
- The Provisional IRA found it could raise vast
sums of money by frightening shopkeepers and
business owners into paying protection money - Counterterrorism should concentrate on cutting
off the financial source of terrorism. Behind
every large terrorist group lies a financial
network
5Crime Pays
6Crime Pays
- Terrorist financing
- Terrorist operations do not cost a lot of money,
but the overall budget is quite high - Individual operations are inexpensive, but
organizations are costly - The problem of the costs of terrorism
- Terrorists find it difficult to participate in
the economic system, so they are forced to join
an underground economy
7 Crime Pays
- The Hawala system
- A Hawala dealer accepts a credit promise from a
dealer in another country and delivers money to a
client on the basis of the promise - If police forces can follow the money through an
organization, they can eventually take an
organization apart
8 Crime Pays
- Other forms of terrorist funding
- Smuggle stolen goods and contraband
- Charities
- Small markets
- Counterfeiting and fraud
- Extortion and protection rackets
9A Macroeconomic Theory of the New
Terrorist Economy
10A Macroeconomic Theory of the New Terrorist
Economy
- Globalism
- Some countries prospered, but other countries
grew weaker and poorer - Terrorism took hold in some of the areas left
behind in the rush toward globalism, and this
changed the nature of terrorist financing
11A Macroeconomic Theory of the New Terrorist
Economy
- Loretta Napeoleoni
- New economy of terrorism
- Origins of the new economy of terrorism grew from
the Cold War - The macroeconomic shift began at the end of World
War II with the colonial revolts - Desire for autonomy led terrorists to join
criminals in an underground economy - The Shining Path
- The Popular Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
- Militant Palestinians
- The IRA
12A Macroeconomic Theory of the New Terrorist
Economy
- The new terrorist economy and the ETA
- Globalization has created pockets in the world
where failed or weak states are left to govern
with little economic and political power - Terrorists and criminal groups grow in such
places - Illegitimate groups form a shell state, an
organization that acts like a government in a
place where the government is not strong enough
to act - Modern terrorism and shell states
- Modern terrorism is an international force
supported by groups in shell states that
continually change both their organizational
structures and political goals to maintain income
from an international underground economy - The most important objective is to raise funds
13A Macroeconomic Theory of the New Terrorist
Economy
- Mario Ferrero
- Modern radical Islamic groups use violent
activity as a means of providing economic
stability
14A Macroeconomic Theory of the New Terrorist
Economy
- Macroeconomic theory and counterterrorism
- Macroeconomic theory suggests that
counterterrorism policies should be aimed at
providing the worlds people with economic
stability, opportunity, and participation in the
mainstream economy - Economic policies to counter terrorism
- supporting states in threat of failure
- providing opportunities for people to participate
and benefit from economic systems - eliminating underground economic networks
15The Narcoterrorism Debate
16The Narcoterrorism Debate
- Narcoterrorism
- The term narcoterrorism refers to terrorists
using either terrorist tactics to support drug
operations or drug trade profits to finance
terrorism - Rachel Ehrenfeld championed the idea of
narcoterrorism - The narcotics trade is one of terrorist groups
primary source of money
17The Narcoterrorism Debate
- Steven Casteel
- An executive with the DEA, he told a U.S. senate
committee that terrorism and the drug trade are
intertwined - He believes that globalization has intensified
the relationship between terrorism and drugs
18The Narcoterrorism Debate
- Joshua Kransa
- If people are willing to expand the definition of
national security beyond the framework of
military defense, drugs pose a security problem - The drug trade threatens political and economic
stability while disrupting society
19Narcoterrorism Another View
20Narcoterrorism Another View
- Reasons for rejecting narcoterrorism
- Selling drugs is only one method, and the drug
problem is not caused by terrorism - The term narcoterrorism is an attempt to take
political advantage of the fear of terrorism - Combining the drug problem with terrorism
confuses two different issues
21Narcoterrorism Another View
- David Kaplan
- Charities are responsible for the bulk of
terrorist financing - Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy
- Narcoterrorism is a convenient term for appealing
to public emotions and giving the police more
power - Civil libertarians
- If governments link drugs with terrorism, they
can reinvent the meaning of crime. Drug dealers
will become terrorists, and a frightened public
will grant the government expanded powers to
combat drugs