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It's Time to Get Serious about the Tri-Border Region

 

Originally published in the Buenos Aires Herald

May 8, 2011

 

By Avi Jorisch

 

The Tri-Border Area (TBA) along the junction of Argentina, Brazil, and
Paraguay is a hotbed of illegal activity that includes money launderers,
arms traffickers, counterfeiters, drug traffickers, and terrorists. In fact,
it is one of the most dangerous places in the world. According to a recent
U.S. Government study, this area annually generates over $6 billion of
illicit money and is nearly devoid of all governmental control.

Given the combination of a porous border and known terrorist activity, the
TBA has quietly become a top priority for U.S. policymakers since the
September 11 attacks. According to former FBI director Louis Freeh, the area
is a "free zone for significant criminal activity, including people who are
organized to commit acts of terrorism." Numerous U.S. intelligence and law
enforcement agencies believe that many of the area's approximately 20,000
Muslim and Arab residents give financial support to groups such as
Hizballah, Hamas, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and al-Qaeda. South American and
U.S. officials have concluded that money raised in the TBA is used to
finance training camps, propaganda operations, and bomb attacks in South
America.

Yet all three TBA governments generally deny the problem, claiming that they
have not detected terrorist activity or cells in the region.
Counterterrorism officials from other countries disagree, with the U.S. and
Israel reportedly going so far as to dispatch CIA and Mossad operatives to
the region to neutralize what they believe could be an imminent terrorist
threat.

Hizballah is perhaps the most active terrorist group in the TBA, and its
role there has been extensively documented. For example, a U.S.
congressional report stated that the group "clearly derives a quite
substantial amount of income from its various illicit activities in the
TBA." The organization reportedly used the TBA to plan and finance two major
terrorist attacks in Buenos Aires, the 1992 attack on the Israeli embassy
and the 1994 attack on the city's main Jewish community center.

Twice in recent years, the U.S. Treasury Department has taken action against
Hizballah in the TBA. In 2006, Adam Szubin, Director of the U.S. Office of
Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) charged that Assad Ahmad Barakat was a "major
financial artery to Hizballah in Lebanon." That same year, the Treasury
Department designated nine individuals and two businesses in the region for
providing financial and logistical support to Hizballah.

What can the three TBA countries and the international community do to
reduce illicit activity in the TBA? First, while Brazil and Argentina, after
tremendous international pressure, have criminalized financing of terrorism,
Paraguay has yet to do so. This represents a significant challenge to
counter-terrorism and anti-money-laundering efforts, and the Argentinean
government and its allies should stress how important it is for Paraguay to
implement this type of reform.

The financial industry should also be marshaled into action. Banks in
Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay, in addition to major financial institutions
around the world, should carry out enhanced due diligence on all
transactions emanating from the TBA. These countries should also force their
banks to implement strict controls to prevent abuse of the financial
industry. A significant number of financial institutions operate in the
zone, and most are complicit to some degree in the illicit activity. For
example, Ciudad del Este, in the Paraguayan part of the TBA, reportedly has
55 different banks and foreign exchange houses, despite a population of only
300,000. Since other cities of similar size average 5-10 banking facilities,
this appears to indicate that many of those institutions are involved in
illicit activity.

The three TBA countries may wish to emulate a successful U.S. law
enforcement model known as High Intensity Financial Crime Areas (HIFCAs) and
High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTAs). These "areas" were conceived
as a means of concentrating law enforcement efforts-investigations,
analysis, and prosecution-in regions with significant illicit activity. The
creation of such zones has historically proven effective in curbing illicit
activity. The U.S. government should offer massive foreign aid to encourage
TBA governments to undertake this initiative.

Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay can do much more to confront the threat of
illicit financial activity. Implementation of measures to detect and prevent
such activity, coupled with a robust ability to enforce financial controls,
is vital if the international community is to make serious headway against
money laundering and terrorism financing.

 



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