Why terror financing is so tough to track down
British leader Gordon Brown called last month for the creation of a
multinational team to crack the problem.
By Mark Rice-Oxley | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0308/p04s01-woeu.html


LONDON ­ When police raided a London mosque three years ago in their pursuit
of a radical Islamic preacher, they found forged passports, laminating
equipment, and bundles of cash.

The haul, details of which were only recently made public, speaks volumes
about a remarkable evolution in the funding of terrorism. What was once a
global network financed by elusive donors and administered by Al Qaeda
"fund- managers" has now fragmented into a constellation of franchises that
sustain themselves primarily through crime.

This, experts say, is partly a result of the vigorous multinational effort
since 9/11 to break up the Al Qaeda network and stanch the cash flows that
sustained terror attacks. But it's also due to the reduced cost of mounting
terror attacks, they say.

Estimates suggest that the 9/11 attacks may have cost as much as $500,000 to
stage. By contrast, the Madrid bombings of 2004 are believed to have cost no
more than $15,000, and last year's London attacks perhaps $2,000.Four bombs,
four rucksacks, some train tickets, a little gasoline, and a few phone
calls.

"Terrorist financing is very different today," says Loretta Napoleoni,
author of "Modern Jihad: Tracing the Dollars Behind the Terror Networks."
"Five years ago, we had large movement of funds which went through the
international financial system.

"Now we are just talking about four friends who raise £1,000 to stage an
attack," she adds. "The unit cost of terrorist financing has crashed to the
floor. They [terrorists] don't need another 9/11. They can do a small thing
and create the same hysteria."

But those who track terror financing haven't adjusted their strategies
accordingly, says Gus Hosein, an antiterrorism expert at the London School
of Economics: "What we are seeing is terror done on the cheap and yet all
the regulations to monitor financial transactions and crack down on this are
looking for larger sums."

A flood of information

The 9/11 attacks startled the world into action to combat terror finance.
More than 130 countries have signed on to a UN convention requiring
legislative action and financial supervision to spot the dirty money. Scores
of charities and individuals have been blacklisted both by the UN and by
individual jurisdictions.

Hundreds of millions of dollars of assets have been frozen. Many countries
set up dedicated terrorist finance units to coordinate action, like the US
Treasury's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. Some passed laws
to make financing terrorism a specific crime.

Many of the ideas emanated from a set of recommendations issued by the
Paris-based think tank Financial Action Task Force [FATF], in October 2001.

Vincent Schmoll, a senior policy analyst at FATF who says the
recommendations have taken on a certain "moral authority" with countries
that might otherwise drag their heels, lists the main areas where progress
has been made: freezing assets, notification of suspicious transactions by
financial institutions, and growing efforts to tackle the informal money
transfer system, known as hawala, which operates below the official
financial system's radar.

But there have been problems with some initiatives. Banks desperate to avoid
a black mark for letting suspect money through the net have zealously filed
their "suspicious activity reports," resulting in an avalanche of paperwork
for overwhelmed financial investigators. Some estimates put the number of
filings in the US alone at 13 million a day.

Islamic charities, meanwhile, complain bitterly about being singled out for
attention. One London-based charity that helps fund Palestinian social
projects, Interpal, protests that it was blacklisted by America even though
it had been cleared in Britain. "It means we cannot take any donations in US
dollars, which is obviously a major obstacle to getting funds," complains
one employee.

While charity forms an important pillar of the Islamic faith, intelligence
chiefs have long suspected that alms sometimes end up financing terrorists.

'Following the money' - few arrests

Despite the flurry of activity, however, actual convictions for financing
terrorism have been few and far between. Last September, a Spanish court
sentenced Imad Yarkas to 27 years for helping fund the 9/11 attacks; two
months earlier, Yemeni cleric Mohammed Ali Hassan al-Moayad was sentenced to
75 years in the US for conspiring to provide financial support to Al Qaeda
and Hamas.

The reason for the dearth of other convictions may be that the
authoritieschoose to "follow the money," rather than haul in suspects, says
Bill Tupman, a professor at Exeter University in Britain who has studied
terrorism for decades.

While the 9/11 commission said that tracking Al Qaeda financing had proven
"a very effective way to locate terrorist operatives and supporters and to
disrupt terrorist plots," Professor Tupman explains that intelligence
services face a difficult choice of whether to confiscate the money and
bring a criminal case, or follow the cash and see where it ends up.

He adds that the lack of criminal convictions may also be due to the fact
that terror funding is a complex jigsaw, and no one agency holds all the
pieces. Banks may have one piece, counterterrorist units another, but others
may be held by partners overseas, requiring better international
cooperation. "There is plenty of information," says Tupman, "but then there
was plenty of information at the time of 9/11 ... the problem is putting it
all together."

A new center of experts

If the problem is putting it all together, the solution, according to
Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, lies in unified action.
Among a series of measures outlined last month was a plan to bring national
experts together in a unit that would work at "cracking" terror finance in
the same way that wartime mathematicians collaborated in cracking the Nazi
Enigma code.

But while international efforts focus on the big money that helped finance
9/11 and establish terror cells in Europe, Al Qaeda has moved on. Experts
say terrorists are no longer waiting for Osama bin Laden's moneymen to dole
out the cash. Instead they are, according to Professor Wilkinson,
"accumulating funds themselves for attacks through petty crime, ID theft,
fraud of many sorts, money laundering, and smuggling of money and
commodities across porous borders."

Tupman says the metamorphosis mirrors that of groups such as Irish
republicans and South American narcoterrorists.

"If you are going to survive, you have to create income streams," he says.
"And if you stay in the legal world, it's confiscated, so you end up
following the examples of people who run illicit businesses." The alliance
between organized crime and terrorists is increasingly profitable, he says.
But successful terror cells will always need to launder money to find
somewhere safe to park it until it is needed, perhaps buying property for
cash or investing in trusts that yield an income.

The trick for the authorities is to snare the dirty money at the point that
it tries to enter the legitimate system. Those points should be the
frontline in the war on terror, says a UN expert, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because of continued involvement in the affair. "It's where you
incorporate companies, it's with the bankers and fiduciary trusts and
lawyers that help you mutate these things on a weekly basis, buying assets
that are portable, that you can move easily, so you always get money
wherever you go."

But for open societies that pride themselves on freewheeling financial
centers, snaring the villains without hindering the operations of the
innocent can be difficult. Are cities like London, whose easy-come-easy-go
attitudes bring boundless international capital, going to sacrifice
financial freedom to catch a few money launderers? Napoleoni thinks not.

"After all," she says, "you can open a bank account in Turkey and use a
cashpoint anywhere in Europe to withdraw the funds. "How are you going to
stop that?"


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