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Arabia
Terror finance trail vanishes in Saudi Arabia
2007-09-30
The info's not new, but finding it in the Independent is interesting.
Six years on from the atrocities of 9/11, in which 19 terrorists, 15 of them Saudi nationals, flew jets into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon – with the fourth plane crashing in a field – Saudi Arabia is still a major obstacle in the fight to crack down on terrorist financing.

Saudi Arabia, the Middle East's economic powerhouse and major US ally, only criminalised money laundering and terrorist financing in 2003, after the kingdom itself was the target of terrorist attacks.

It claims it is clamping down on terrorist financing, but just one major report has been carried out into how effectively the kingdom is implementing legislation. This was in 2004 by the OECD's Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global body overseeing anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing initiatives.

Recent information on the kingdom's efforts is almost non-existent, which the US State Department considers a problem as it "impedes the evaluation and design of enhancements to the judicial aspects of its anti-money laundering system".

The FATF said: "We don't have any current information on Saudi Arabia." It recommended getting in touch with the International Monetary Fund and the Middle East/ North Africa FATF, a regional body based in Bahrain.

However, the IMF did not respond to queries and Mena-FATF could not provide any information – not even the central bank's phone number – on the kingdom's progress. Such a lack of detail raises questions about the organisation's claim that money laundering and terrorist financing have fallen by 90 per cent in the Middle East in recent years.

The private sector was also of little help in shedding light on Saudi Arabia's compliance with FATF and UN recommendations. The head of financial crime investigations at a leading Saudi bank said: "Rules within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia prevent me from discussing what Saudi Arabia or the bank has achieved in relation to anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing."

Such a glaring lack of transparency is not unusual. Saudi Arabia is secretive about its internal workings and press freedoms are non-existent. The Saudi media made no mention of the recent exposé by the British press of BAE paying a sweetener to Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan.

But the information blackout on terrorist financing is alarming as Saudi Arabia is considered a "moderate" Arab state by the US and UK governments and an ally in the "war on terror".

Moreover, Saudi Arabia's brand of Islam, the ultra-conservative Wahhabism, has been exported globally and is followed by al-Qa'ida and other Sunni fundamentalist groups responsible for terrorist attacks around the world.

Funding for such groups comes from charitable organisations and wealthy individuals in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. Exactly how much cash flows through or from Saudi Arabia is difficult to tell due to the country's cash-based society and because no personal income records are kept for tax purposes. Additionally, under the five pillars of Islam, Muslims have a religious obligation – zakat – to donate money to charity, which is often done anonymously.

Such donationscan be, knowingly or unknowingly, used to finance terrorist organisations. In the decade up to 2002, according to a report to the UN Security Council, al- Qa'ida and other Islamist bodies collected between £150m and £250m, mostly from Saudi charities and private donors. This practice is still occurring, with Saudi Arabia linked to funding Sunni jihadists in Iraq.

Posted by:lotp

#8  I think a 10Mt nuclear sunrise at midnight in Riyadh would put an end to a LOT of the Saudi-funded islamic nonsense. The rest of the world will get a clue, whether they want one or not. Until we do, they will continue to think of us as a nation of "all hat, no saddle".
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-09-30 17:18  

#7  Hey Moose I think it's time to cut down on the Tom Clancey books, yer gettin' too close to plagerism. ;^)
Posted by: AlanC   2007-09-30 14:14  

#6  I suspect we could do well with a few "muzzie hunters" with the dedication of Simon Wiesenthal.
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-09-30 12:19  

#5  Moose is onto something good. While there are plenty of knuckleheads out there who can roll their eyes, growl fiercely and march off to their deaths (helllooooo, Taliban!), the positions that require real talent in terrorist organizatins are generally undersubscribed.

Financiers. Bomb-makers. Communications specialists. Number threes.

Identify those guys and whack 'em. Heart attacks. Ricin-tipped umbrellas. Drives into the desert. Mr. Hellfire and his related friends. Whatever it takes, just get rid of them and let the terrorists flail about.
Posted by: Steve White   2007-09-30 12:14  

#4  If a trace is made to an individual, then that individual should be sanctioned. Nothing obvious, just a fatal heart attack or something like that.

It is a process. You take out financiers until there is nobody left willing and able to give the terrorists major money. By keeping it accidental and subtle, you can take down large numbers without being obvious.

In such a case, you might even come up with some novel disease that only seems to afflict the problem children. Even if the disease shouldn't be fatal, it gives the pathologists something to focus on, instead of what is really killing them.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-09-30 11:26  

#3  never would have guessed this
Posted by: sinse   2007-09-30 08:47  

#2  There are allot of Saudi troops that have died trying to bag these Saudi Prince financed terrorist.
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-09-30 06:22  

#1  The Source.
Posted by: gromgoru   2007-09-30 06:03  

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