http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/051205/5terror.htm


How jihadist groups are using organized-crime tactics--and profits--to
finance attacks on targets around the globe 


By David E. Kaplan 

12/5/05

The first blast struck at 1:25 p.m., shattering the walls of the Bombay
Stock Exchange, leaving a grisly scene of broken bodies, shattered glass,
and smoke. Next to be hit was the main office of the national airline, Air
India, followed by the Central Bazaar and major hotels. At the international
airport, hand grenades were thrown at jets parked on the tarmac. For nearly
two hours the carnage went on, as unknown assailants wreaked havoc upon one
of the world's largest cities. In all, 10 bombs packed with plastic
explosives rocked Bombay, killing 257 and injuring over 700.

What happened in Bombay on that day, March 12, 1993, was a chilling
precursor to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, a careful choreography of death and
destruction, aimed at the heart of a nation's financial center and intended
to maximize civilian casualties. Engineered by Muslim extremists, the
attacks were meant to exact revenge for deadly riots by Hindu
fundamentalists that had claimed over a thousand lives, most of them Muslim.
But more than vengeance was at work in Bombay. Indian police later recovered
an arsenal big enough to spark a civil war: nearly 4 tons of explosives,
1,100 detonators, nearly 500 grenades, 63 assault rifles, and thousands of
rounds of ammunition. Within days of the attacks, police had gotten their
first break by tracing an abandoned van filled with a load of weapons. The
trail soon led to a surprising suspect: not a terrorist but a gangster. And
not just any gangster but an extraordinary crime boss, a man known as South
Asia's Al Capone.

Virtually unknown in the West, Dawood Ibrahim is a household name across the
region, his exploits known by millions. He is, by all accounts, a
world-class mobster, a soft-spoken, murderous businessman from Bombay who
now lives in exile, sheltered by India's archenemy, Pakistan. He is India's
godfather of godfathers, a larger-than-life figure alleged to run criminal
gangs from Bangkok to Dubai. Strong-arm protection, drug trafficking,
extortion, murder-for-hire--all are stock-in-trade rackets, police say, of
Dawood Ibrahim's syndicate, the innocuously named D Company.

Dawood, as he is known in the Indian press, is very much on Washington's
radar screen today. Two years ago, the Treasury Department quietly
designated Ibrahim a 'global terrorist' for lending his smuggling routes to
al Qaeda, supporting jihadists in Pakistan, and helping engineer the 1993
attack on Bombay. He is far and away India's most wanted man, his name
invoked time and again by Indian officials in their discussions of terrorism
with U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers. As a result of those
discussions, the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration each have
active investigations into Dawood's far-flung criminal network, U.S. News
has learned.

Understanding Dawood's operations is important, experts say, because they
show how growing numbers of terrorist groups have come to rely on the
tactics--and profits--of organized criminal activity to finance their
operations across the globe. An inquiry by U.S. News, based on interviews
with counterterrorism and law enforcement officials from six countries, has
found that terrorists worldwide are transforming their operating cells into
criminal gangs. 'Transnational crime is converging with the terrorist
world,' says Robert Charles, the State Department's former point man on
narcotics. Antonio Maria Costa, the head of the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime, agrees: 'The world is seeing the birth of a new hybrid of
organized-crime-terrorist organizations. We are breaking new ground.'

Blood money. Some scholars argue that terrorists and traditional crime
groups both now exist on a single, violent plane, populated at one end by
politically minded jihadists and at the other by profit-driven mobsters,
with most groups falling somewhere in between. Mafia groups and drug rings
in Colombia and the Balkans, for example, commit political assassinations
and bomb police and prosecutors, while terrorist gangs in Europe and North
Africa traffic in drugs and illegal aliens. Both crime syndicates and
terrorist groups thrive in the same subterranean world of black markets and
laundered money, relying on shifting networks and secret cells to accomplish
their objectives. Both groups have similar needs: weapons, false
documentation, and safe houses.

But some U.S. intelligence analysts see little evidence of this melding of
forces. Marriages of convenience may exist, they say, but the key difference
is one of motive: Terrorist groups are driven by politics and religion,
while purely criminal groups have just one thing in mind--profit. Indeed,
associating with terrorists, particularly since 9/11, can be very bad for
business--and while crime syndicates may be parasitical, most do not want to
kill their host.

What many intelligence analysts do see today, however, is terrorist
organizations stealing whole chapters out of the criminal
playbook--trafficking in narcotics, counterfeit goods, illegal aliens--and
in the process converting their terrorist cells into criminal gangs.

The terrorist gang behind the train bombings in Madrid last year, for
example, financed itself almost entirely with money earned from trafficking
in hashish and ecstasy. Al Qaeda's affiliate in Southeast Asia, Jemaah
Islamiyah, engages in bank robbery and credit card fraud; its 2002 Bali
bombings were financed, in part, through jewelry store robberies that netted
over 5 pounds of gold. In years past, many terrorist groups would have
steered away from criminal activity, worried that such tactics might tarnish
their image. But for hard-pressed jihadists, committing crimes against
nonbelievers is increasingly seen as acceptable. As Abu Bakar Bashir, Jemaah
Islamiyah's reputed spiritual head, reportedly said: 'You can take their
blood; then why not take their property?'

The implications are troubling because organized crime offers a means for
terrorist groups to increase their survivability. A Stanford University
study conducted after the 9/11 attacks looked at why some conflicts last so
much longer than others. One key factor: crime. Out of 128 conflicts, the 17
in which insurgents relied heavily on 'contraband finances' lasted on
average 48 years--over five times as long as the rest. 'If the criminal
underworld can keep terrorist coffers flush,' says Charles, the former State
Department official, 'we will continue to face an enemy that would otherwise
run out of oxygen.'

The growing reliance on crime stems from the end of the Cold War, when state
sponsorship of terrorism largely faded along with communism, forcing groups
to become much more self-sufficient. Accelerating the trend, analysts say,
is the crackdown since 9/11 on fundraising by Islamic radicals from mosques
and charities, which has pushed their operations further toward
racketeering. 'The bottom line is if you want to survive today as a
terrorist, you probably have to support yourself,' says Raphael Perl, a
counterterrorism specialist at the Congressional Research Service. The drug
trade, in particular, has proved irresistible for many. Nearly half of the
41 groups on the government's list of terrorist organizations are tied to
narcotics trafficking, according to DEA statistics.

Scams. The new face of terrorism can best be seen in western Europe. 'Crime
is now the main source of cash for Islamic radicals in Europe,' says
attorney Lorenzo Vidino, author of the new book Al Qaeda in Europe. 'They do
not need to get money wired from abroad like 10 years ago. They're
generating their own as criminal gangs.' European police and intelligence
officials agree: The Continent's most worrisome cells, composed largely of
immigrants from Morocco and Algeria, have in effect become racketeering
syndicates. Their scams are as varied as the criminal world: Drugs,
smuggling, and fraud are mainstays, but others include car theft, selling
pirated CD s, and counterfeiting money. One enterprising pair of jihadists
in Germany hoped to fund a suicide mission to Iraq by taking out nearly $1
million in life insurance and staging the death of one in a faked traffic
accident. Some cells are loosely bound and based on petty crime; others,
like the group behind the Madrid bombings, suggest a whole new level of
sophistication.

The terrorists behind the Madrid attacks were major drug dealers, with a
network stretching from Morocco through Spain to Belgium and the
Netherlands. Their ringleader, Jamal 'El Chino' Ahmidan, was the brother of
one of Morocco's top hashish traffickers. Ahmidan and his followers paid for
their explosives by trading hashish and cash with a former miner. When
police raided the home of one plotter, they seized 125,800 ecstasy
tablets--one of the largest hauls in Spanish history. In all, authorities
recovered nearly $2 million in drugs and cash from the group. In contrast,
the Madrid bombings, which killed 191 people, cost only about $50,000.

Similar reports of drug-dealing jihadists are coming out of France and
Italy. In Milan, Islamists peddle heroin on the streets at $20 a hit and
then hand off 80 percent of the take to their cell leader, according to
Italy's L'Espresso magazine. The relationship, surprisingly, is not new. As
early as 1993, says Vidino, French authorities warned that dope sales in
suburban Muslim slums had fallen under the control of gangs led by Afghan
war veterans with ties to Algerian terrorists. What is new is the scale of
this toxic mix of jihad and dope. Moroccan terrorists used drug sales to
fund not only the 2004 Madrid attack but the 2003 attacks in Casablanca,
killing 45, and attempted bombings of U.S. and British ships in Gibraltar in
2002. So large looms the North African connection that investigators believe
jihadists have penetrated as much as a third of the $12.5 billion Moroccan
hashish trade--the world's largest--a development worrisome not only for its
big money but for its extensive smuggling routes through Europe.

Along with drug trafficking, fraud of every sort is a growth industry for
European jihadists. Popular scams include fake credit cards, cellphone
cloning, and identity theft--low-level frauds that are lucrative but seldom
attract the concerted attention of authorities. Some operatives are more
ambitious, however. Officials point to the case of Hassan Baouchi, a
23-year-old ATM technician in France. Baouchi told police last year that
he'd been held hostage by robbers who forced him to empty six ATMs of their
cash--about $1.3 million. Investigators didn't quite buy Baouchi's story and
soon put him under arrest; the money, they believe, has ended up with the
Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group--the al Qaeda affiliate tied to the
bombings in Casablanca and Madrid.

Another big racket for European jihadists is human smuggling. 'North Africa
and western Europe are somewhat like Mexico and the United States,' says a
U.S. counterterrorism agent. 'But now imagine if Mexico were Muslim and
jihadist cells were the ones moving aliens across the border.' Jihadists do
not dominate Europe's lucrative human smuggling trade, but they are surely
profiting by it. Authorities in Italy suspect that one gang of suspected
militants made over 30 landings on an island off Sicily, and that it moved
thousands of people across the Mediterranean at some $4,000 a head.
Particularly active is the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, an Algerian
al Qaeda affiliate known by its French acronym, GSPC. Two years ago, German
authorities dismantled another group moving Kurds into Europe, tied to al
Qaeda ally Ansar al-Islam, a fixture of the Iraq insurgency. A recent
Italian intelligence report notes that jihadists' work in human smuggling
has brought them into contact with domestic and foreign criminal
organizations. One partner in the trade, sources say, is the Neapolitan
Camorra, the notorious Naples-based version of the Mafia, which operates
safe houses for illegal aliens. Italian court records show contact between
Mafia arms dealers and radical Islamists as early as 1998.

Prison recruits. The prime training ground for Europe's jihadist criminals
may well be prison. There are no hard numbers, but as much as half of
France's prison population is now believed to be Muslim. In Spanish jails,
where Islamic radicals have recruited for a decade, the number has reached
some 10 percent. Ahmidan, leader of the Madrid bombing cell, is thought to
have been radicalized while serving time in Spain and Morocco. Prison was
also the recruiting center for many of the 40-plus suspects nabbed by
Spanish authorities last year for plotting a sequel to the Madrid
bombings--an attack with a half ton of explosives on Spain's national
criminal court. Nearly half the group had rap sheets with charges ranging
from drug trafficking to forgery and fraud.

Al Qaeda's leadership, however, has proved more wary about jumping into the
drug trade. Holed up in the forbidding mountain refuges of the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, Osama bin Laden and his remaining lieutenants
have steered clear of the largest horde of criminal wealth in years: the
exploding Afghan heroin trade. Press reports of bin Laden's involvement in
the drug trade are flat wrong, say counterterrorism officials. Long ago, al
Qaeda strategists reasoned that drug trafficking would expose them to
possible detection, captives have told U.S. interrogators. They also don't
trust many of the big drug barons, intelligence officials say, and have
encouraged their members not to get involved with them.

Bin Laden continues to come up with funds raised from sympathetic mosques
and other supporters, but the money no longer flows so easily. Pakistan and
Saudi Arabia have banned unregulated fundraising at mosques, and western spy
agencies now watch closely how the money flows from big Islamic charities.
One result: Cash-strapped jihadists in the badlands of the border region are
staging kidnappings-for-ransom and highway robberies, Pakistani officials
tell U.S. News . 'Those people are now feeling the pinch,' says Javed
Cheema, head of the Interior Ministry's National Crisis Management Cell. 'We
see a fertile symbiosis of terrorist organizations and crime groups.' Some
jihadists have joined in wholesale pillaging of Afghanistan's heritage by
smuggling antiquities out of the country--a trade nearly as lucrative as
narcotics. Among the items being sold clandestinely on the world market:
centuries-old Buddhist art and other works from the pre-Islamic world.
Apparently, al Qaeda's interest is not new; before 9/11, hijack ringleader
Mohamed Atta approached a German art professor about peddling Afghan
antiquities, Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office revealed this year.
Atta's reason, reports Der Spiegel magazine: 'to finance the purchase of an
airplane.'

Al Qaeda may be avoiding the heroin trade, but nearly everyone else in the
region--from warlords to provincial governors to the Taliban--is not. The
reasons are apparent: Afghanistan's opium trade is exploding. The
cultivation of opium poppies, from which heroin is made, doubled from 2002
to 2003, according to CIA estimates. Then, last year, that amount tripled.
Afghanistan now provides 87 percent of the world's heroin. 'We have never
seen anything like this before,' says Charles, the former State Department
narcotics chief. 'No drug state ever made this much dope and so quickly.'
The narcotics industry now makes up as much as half of Afghanistan's gross
domestic product, analysts estimate, and employs upward of 1 million
laborers, from farmers to warehouse workers to truck drivers. And now
Afghans are adding industrial-level amounts of marijuana to the mix. U.N.
officials estimate that some 74,000 to 86,000 acres of pot are being grown
in Afghanistan--over five times what is grown in Mexico.

Corruption. And if al Qaeda itself is staying out of drugs, its allies
certainly are not. The booming drug trade has given a strong second wind to
the stubborn insurgency being waged by the Taliban and Islamist warlords
like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Both the Taliban and Hekmatyar's Hezb-i-Islami
army control key smuggling routes out of the country, giving them the
ability to levy taxes and protection fees on drug caravans. Crime and
terrorism experts are also alarmed over the corrosive, long-term effects of
all the drug money, not just within Afghanistan but across the region. The
ballooning dope trade is rapidly creating narco-states in central Asia,
destroying what little border control exists and making it easier for
terrorist groups to operate. Ancient smuggling routes from the Silk Road to
the Arabian Sea are being supercharged with tons of heroin and billions of
narcodollars. Within Afghanistan, drug-fueled corruption is pervasive;
governors, mayors, police, and military are all on the take. A raid this
year in strategically located Helmand province came up with a whopping 9 1/2
tons of heroin--stashed inside the governor's own office.

The smuggling routes lead from landlocked Afghanistan to the south and east
through Pakistan, to the west through Iraq, and to the north through central
Asia. Throughout the region the amounts of drugs seized are jumping, along
with rates of crime, drug addiction, and HIV infection. Particularly hard
hit are Afghanistan's impoverished northern neighbors, the former Soviet
republics of Kirgizstan and Tajikistan. Widely praised demonstrations in
Kirgizstan this year, which overthrew the regime of strongman Askar Akayev,
have brought to power an array of questionable figures. 'Entire branches of
government are being directed by individuals tied to organized crime,' warns
Svante Cornell of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute at Johns Hopkins
University. 'The whole revolution smells of opium.'

Neighboring republics are little better off. Central Asia's major terrorist
threat, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, has largely degenerated into a
drug mafia, officials say. In Kazakhstan the interior minister tried to
investigate corruption by going undercover in a truck packed with 9 tons of
watermelons, motoring 1,200 miles from the Kirgiz Republic to the Kazakh
capital. His team had to pay bribes to 36 different police and customs
officials en route--some as little as $1.50. (Others merely accepted their
bribe in melons.) The cargo was never inspected. What is happening in Iran,
meanwhile, is 'a national tragedy,' according to the U.N.'s Costa. So much
Afghan dope is being shipped into the country that it now has the world's
highest per capita rate of addiction. The ruling mullahs in Tehran have
taken it seriously; Iranian security forces have fought deadly battles with
drug traffickers along their border, losing some 3,600 lives in the past 16
years. But even as their troops fight, the corruption has reached high
officials of the Iranian government, who are using drug profits as political
patronage, sources tell U.S. News. 'There are indications,' says Cornell,
'that hard-line conservatives are up to their ears in the Afghan opium
trade.'

Nor has Russia escaped the heroin boom's impact. From central Asia, growing
amounts of Afghan heroin are entering the south of the country; drug-control
officials report that large numbers of Russian military are on the take,
even trucking the stuff in army vehicles. The level of corruption has, in
turn, raised concern over the ultimate black market: in radioactive
materials. Russia's 'nuclear belt'--a chain of nuclear research and weapons
sites--runs directly along those heroin smuggling routes. How bad are
conditions in the area? Bemoans one intelligence expert: 'We know so
little.'

Iraq, too, is starting to see its share of narcotics, but drugs are but a
bit player in an insurgency that has also blurred the lines between
terrorism and organized crime. Within Iraq's lawless borders exists an
unsavory criminal stew composed of home-grown gangsters, ex-Baathists, and
jihadists. 'Terrorists and insurgents are conducting a lot of criminal
activities, extortion and kidnapping in particular, as a way to acquire
revenues,' Caleb Temple of the Defense Intelligence Agency testified to
Congress this July. Among the biggest cash cows: The insurgents take part in
the wholesale theft of much of Iraq's gasoline supply, earning millions of
dollars in a thriving black market. Extortion and protection are also rife,
and kidnapping for ransom has ballooned into a major industry, with up to 10
abductions a day. Among those targeted: politicians, professors, foreigners,
and housewives. Those with political value may find they've been sold to
militants.

The insurgents are also key players in the graft and corruption that have
enveloped Iraq. So much foreign aid money has disappeared that two U.S.
intelligence task forces are now investigating its diversion to the
insurgency, U.S. News has learned. Western aid agencies, Islamic charities,
and U.S. military supply programs all have been targeted, analysts believe.
Occupation authorities cannot account for nearly $9 billion of oil revenues
it had transferred to Iraqi government agencies between 2003 and 2004,
according to an audit by a special U.S. inspector general set up by
Congress. 'Even if a little bit ends up in insurgent hands,' says one
official, 'it doesn't take a lot to build a truck bomb.' The implications
are troubling: The insurgents may be using America's own foreign aid to fund
the killing of U.S. troops.

Back at home, U.S. officials are looking warily at the growing rackets of
terrorist groups overseas and voice concern that the trend will grow here.
'We see a lot of individual pockets of it in the United States,' says Joseph
Billy, deputy chief of the FBI's counterterrorism division. 'Left unchecked,
it's very worrisome--this is one we have to be aggressive on.' Federal
investigators have uncovered repeated scams here largely involving
supporters of Hamas and Hezbollah, and they have traced tens of thousands of
dollars back to those groups in the Middle East. 'There's a direct tie,'
says Billy. The list of crimes includes credit card fraud, identity theft,
the sale of unlicensed T-shirts--even the theft and resale of infant
formula. Most of these U.S. rackets have been low level, but some, involving
cigarette smuggling and counterfeit products, have earned their organizers
millions of dollars.

Foreign fish. The big fish--the Indian mobsters, Moroccan hash dealers, and
Afghan drug barons--are swimming overseas, however, and U.S. law enforcement
is starting to train its sights on the worst of them. After being shut out
of Afghanistan for two decades, the Drug Enforcement Administration is
making progress in going after top Afghan traffickers tied to the Taliban.
DEA agents are applying the same sort of 'kingpin strategy' that helped to
break the Medellin and Cali cartels in Colombia by targeting whole
trafficking organizations. The agency has identified some 10 of these
'high-value targets,' led by Afghans who have amassed fortunes of as much as
$100 million, officials say. Two already have fallen this year: In April,
agents nabbed a man they've dubbed 'the Pablo Escobar of Afghanistan,'
Taliban ally Bashir Noorzai, by enticing him to a New York meeting. Noorzai
is said to have helped establish the modern Afghan drug trade, and so
lucrative were his operations that the indictment against him calls for the
seizure of $50 million in drug proceeds. Then in October, the Justice
Department announced the extradition of Baz Mohammad, another alleged
'Taliban-linked narcoterrorist,' charged with conspiring to import over $25
million worth of heroin into the United States and other countries.
Mohammad, according to an indictment, boasted that 'selling heroin in the
United States was a 'jihad' because they were taking the Americans' money at
the same time the heroin was killing them.' He is now awaiting trial, in a
New York jail.

The DEA's experience, however, illustrates some of the problems in grappling
with the nexus between organized crime and terrorism. Despite post-9/11
calls for cooperation, the DEA's ties to other U.S. agencies are often
strained; the drug agency is not even considered part of the U.S.
intelligence community. Pentagon officials, worried over 'mission creep,'
routinely refuse to give DEA agents air support in Afghanistan. Other turf
issues still plague the FBI, CIA, Homeland Security, and other agencies,
making collaborative work on the crime-terrorism issue problematic. The
intelligence community, for example, remains leery of seeing its people or
information end up in court. 'It's the same wall we saw between law
enforcement and the intelligence world,' says one insider. 'Only now it's
between terrorism and other crimes.'

'We have stovepiped battling terrorism and organized crime,' agrees Charles,
the State Department's former top cop. 'You cannot meet a complex threat
like this without a similar response. And we don't have one.' Indeed,
interviews with counterterrorism and law enforcement officials in a
half-dozen federal agencies suggest that cooperation across the government
remains episodic at best and depends most often on personal relationships.
'The incentives are all still against sharing,' complains one analyst. 'The
leadership says yes, the policies say yes, but the culture says no. The
bureaucracy has won.'

Washington looks like a model of cooperation compared with Europe, however,
where the walls between agencies and across borders stand even higher. 'If
we don't get on top of the criminal aspect and the drug connections, we will
lose ground in halting the spread of these [terrorist] organizations,' warns
Gen. James Jones, head of the U.S. European Command, who has watched the
rise in terrorist rackets with mounting concern. 'You have to have much
greater cohesion and synergy.'

For a brief moment in the early '90s, American cops, spies, and soldiers did
come together on a common target of crime and terrorism--Pablo Escobar and
his Medellin cocaine cartel. Escobar's killers were blamed for the murder of
hundreds of Colombian officials and the bombing of an Avianca airliner that
killed 110. To get Escobar, firewalls between agencies came down,
information was shared, and money and people were focused on destroying one
of the world's most powerful crime syndicates. During the 1990s,
transnational crime continued to be seen as a national security priority,
but it fell off the map after 9/11. Until January of this year, the federal
government's chief interagency committee on organized crime hadn't even met
for three years. The intelligence community's reporting on the area,
although boosted in the past year, remains a near-bottom priority. One
knowledgeable source called the quality of work overseas on crime 'sorely
lacking' and said the best material comes from other governments.
Domestically, meanwhile, years of neglect by the FBI of analysis and
information technology have left the agency without much useful information
in its files. 'Everyone thinks we've got huge databases with all our
materials on organized crime,' says one veteran. 'We've got nothing close.'

Still, the growing criminal inroads by terrorist groups have raised alarms
among a handful of tough-minded policymakers in Washington, and they are
pushing for change. The National Security Council has begun work on a new
policy on transnational crime that promises to make the crime-terrorism
connection a top priority. The CIA's Crime and Narcotics Center is
spearheading the work of a dozen agencies in revamping the government's
overall assessment of international crime; their report, with special
attention to the nexus with terrorism, is scheduled for release early next
year. One program that has caught U.S. attention is underway in Great
Britain, where London's Metropolitan Police now routinely monitor low-level
criminal activity for ties to terrorism, checking over reports of fraud
involving banks, credit cards, and travel documents. Similar work is being
done by the feds' Joint Terrorism Task Forces in some U.S. cities. And
Immigration and Customs Enforcement has prioritized cracking rings smuggling
people from high-risk countries, with good success.

'Draining the swamp.' In some ways, the deeper involvement by terrorists in
traditional criminal activity may make it easier to track them. Criminal
informants, who can be tempted with shortened prison time and money, are
much easier to develop than the true believers who fill the ranks of
terrorist groups. Acts of crime also attract attention and widen the chances
that terrorists will make a mistake. Take, for example, a case uncovered
this July, in which four men allegedly plotted to wage a jihad against some
20 targets in Southern California, including National Guard facilities, the
Israeli Consulate, and several synagogues. Prosecutors said the planned
attacks, led by the founder of a radical Islamic prison group, were being
funded by a string of gas station robberies. The break in the case came not
by an elite counterterrorist squad but by local cops who found a cellphone
one of the robbers had lost during a gas station stickup.

Getting a handle on terrorism's growing criminal rackets will not prove
easy, however. 'Draining the swamp,' as counterterrorism officials vow to
do, may require more than even a seamless approach by intelligence and law
enforcement can offer. Many of the worst groups owe their success to a
pervasive criminality overseas, to failed states and no man's lands from
Central Asia to North Africa to South America, where the rule of law remains
an abstract concept. In other places, it is the governments themselves that
are the criminal enterprises, so mired in corruption that entire countries
could be indicted under U.S. antiracketeering laws. Together, they help make
up a criminal economy that, like a parallel universe, runs beneath the
legitimate world of commerce. This global shadow economy--of dirty money,
criminal enterprises, and black markets--has annual revenues of up to $2
trillion, according to U.N. estimates, larger than the gross domestic
product of all but a handful of countries. Without its underground bankers,
smuggling routes, and fraudulent documents, al Qaeda and its violent
brethren simply could not exist. But taking on a worldwide plague of crime
and corruption might be more than the public bargained for. 'Ultimately,
cracking down means trying to impose order where there's instability, good
governance where there's corruption and crime, and economic growth where
there's poverty,' says the University of Pittsburgh's Phil Williams, a
consultant to the United Nations on crime and terrorism finance. 'As long as
the only routes of escape are violence and the black market, then organized
crime and terrorism will endure as global problems.'

 



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