By Asbarez | Friday, 24 October 2014
“With the important exception of some state-sponsored terrorist organisations, ISIS is probably the best-funded terrorist organisation we have confronted,” David Cohen, U.S. Treasury Department undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in a speech at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington on Oct. 23. “It has amassed wealth at an unprecedented pace.”
ISIS is generating tens of millions of dollars a month through a combination of oil sales, ransom, extortion and other criminal activities, and support from wealthy donors, said Cohen, laying out the most comprehensive outline yet of the U.S. financial strategy against the group.
“It is difficult to get precise revenue estimates … but we estimate that beginning in mid-June, ISIS has earned approximately $1 million a day from oil sales,” Cohen said. Other estimates have ranged as high as $3 million a day.
Middlemen in Turkey
The undersecretary said ISIS was selling oil at substantially discounted prices to a variety of middlemen, including some from Turkey, who then transport the oil to be resold. “It also appears that some of the oil emanating from territory where ISIS operates has been sold to Kurds in Iraq, and then resold into Turkey,” he said.
However, the U.S. official also praised Turkey and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) for being “committed to preventing ISIS-derived oil from crossing their borders.”
He also said U.S.-led airstrikes on ISIS refineries in Syria were also working to threaten the group’s supply networks, dashing a major blow to its resources.
Cohen acknowledged, however, that ISIL moves oil in illicit networks outside the formal economy, making it harder to track.
“But at some point, that oil is acquired by someone who operates in the legitimate economy and who makes use of the financial system. He has a bank account. His business may be financed, his trucks may be insured, his facilities may be licensed,” he said.
“We not only can cut them off from the U.S. financial system and freeze their assets, but we can also make it very difficult for them to find a bank anywhere that will touch their money or process their transactions,” he said.
The Treasury also is going after individuals who donate money to ISIS and is urging officials in Qatar and Kuwait to do more to target terror financiers in their countries. A key, he said, is to restrict the militant group’s access to the international financial system.
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