How ISIS became the richest terrorist group in the world
http://www.ctvnews.ca/world/how-isis-became-the-richest-terrorist-group-in-the-world-1.1872634
Josh Elliott, CTVNews.ca
Published Tuesday, June 17, 2014 10:42AM EDT
Last Updated Tuesday, June 17, 2014 11:06AM EDT
Published Tuesday, June 17, 2014 10:42AM EDT
Last Updated Tuesday, June 17, 2014 11:06AM EDT
The Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) has seemingly come out of nowhere to become the wealthiest terrorist organization in the world, surpassing long-active organizations such as al Qaeda, al Shabab and the Taliban.
The well-equipped, well-organized terrorist force has spread across Iraq like wildfire, seizing key cities and much of the country’s oil wells as it surges eastward through the country. ISIS has been a steadily-growing problem in Iraq and Syria since last December, but attacks escalated in early June and culminated last Wednesday when 800 ISIS fighters captured the Iraqi city of Mosul. Since then, ISIS has significantly increased its size, territory and wealth. The International Business Times says ISIS is now worth $2 billion, making it wealthier than small countries such as Tonga, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands or the Falkland Islands.
But how did the year-old al Qaeda offshoot become wealthier than the organization that spawned it?
Half-a-billion-dollar bank heist
ISIS received a huge injection of cash when it captured the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, reports say. During the invasion, ISIS reportedly secured more than $466 million and a large quantity of gold bullion when it broke into Mosul’s central bank. Since then, the organization has continued to loot and pillage everything in its path, adding to its already considerable wealth. ISIS has also become increasingly well-armed as it appropriates military weapons and equipment left behind after the United States pulled out of Iraq in 2009.
But ISIS already had considerable funding before it took Mosul. According to U.S. intelligence expert Robert McFadden, ISIS has had a strong financial network in place since its inception in 2013. ISIS is set up to rake in funds through extortion, smuggling and private donations, McFadden said. “It goes back to the earliest days of ISIS," McFadden told CTV’s Kevin Newman Live. “In areas that it controlled, its modus operandi has first been to go after the wealth of those from ethnic and religious minorities.” Wealthy private donors in the region provide ISIS with millions of dollars in additional funds, McFadden said. The organization also extorts “taxes” from the businesses in its territory, and adds to its coffers by selling valuable antiquities seized during its takeovers.
ISIS also draws as much as $1 million per day in profit from each oil well under its control in Syria. And despite its terrorist classification, ISIS has had no trouble selling its oil on the world market, McFadden said. “There’s desperation on both sides,” he said. “Where there’s desperation, there’s also commerce.”
But the Mosul bank robbery effectively bumped ISIS up to a new level altogether, and it’s already flexing its financial muscle. McFadden said images of ISIS troops on television show they are well-equipped, with the latest weapons, uniforms and vehicles. “That takes money,” he said.
McFadden partially attributed ISIS’s lightning-quick sweep across Iraq to its considerable financial resources, which have allowed it to become an effective recruiter in the territories it owns. McFadden said ISIS has developed a reputation of paying well and providing support for fighters’ families, especially when the fighter dies in battle. “It’s allowed ISIS to be a more effective recruiter,” McFadden said.
Wealth fuels online presence
ISIS has also used its wealth to develop an Internet presence. The organization posts brutal execution videos and photos to its website, maintains a presence on social media and uses a downloadable smartphone app to keep sympathizers informed.
That’s allowed ISIS to fan the flames of sectarian violence between its Sunni forces and Shiite enemies, according to former U.S. Army officer and intelligence expert Michael Pregent. An Internet presence makes it easier for ISIS to recruit, and creates chaos and fear among the Shiite population, he said.
“It shows that ISIS is a viable Sunni insurgency, but it also does what they want in igniting sectarian strife in the Shiite population,” Pregent told Kevin Newman Live.
Money, weapons, land, soldiers
ISIS formed in April 2013 when al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) merged with an affiliate organization in Syria. Led by Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, an Islamic cleric once detained during the U.S. operation in Iraq, ISIS has spread rapidly across both sides of the Syrian-Iraqi border, and seeks to establish an Islamic state.
ISIS is now waging war on two fronts. To the east, ISIS forces threaten Iraq's capital city of Baghdad, and have swept through nearly half the country. To the west, ISIS has thrust its way into Syrian territory, and now battles Syrian President Bashar al Assad's forces. ISIS-held territory also touches the borders of neighbouring Jordan and Saudi Arabia, with Turkey and Iran not far from its battlefront.
AQI, the organizational predecessor to ISIS, was best-known for suicide attacks, hostage-takings, beheadings and armed attacks, according to Canada's profile of the terrorist organization .AQI's stated goal was to establish a Sunni nation-state governed by Islamic law.
ISIS's stated goals are similar, but its methods have expanded beyond guerilla attacks. ISIS has money, weapons, land and soldiers at its disposal, and its tactics have shifted more toward a military approach.
The latest reports even say ISIS has captured a military base, and is constructing a camp north of Mosul that is designed to house 10,000 soldiers.
ISIS funded by US FEDERAL RESERVE as 13 billion dollars goes unaccounted for in Iraq.
http://investmentwatchblog.com/isis-funded-by-us-federal-reserve-as-13-billion-dollars-goes-unaccounted-for-in-iraq/
This is a report that originated from the Wall Street Journal. Of course, we know that the speculation is that ISIS has been funded by the US, but this new report leaves one infuriated and in shock.
The Federal Reserve has been funding ISIS, and an ISIS leader in Pakistan just admitted it.
So it is very interesting to hear that billions of American dollars are ending up in the hands of ISIS, directly from the Federal Reserve, and that fact is only “raising eyebrows” according to the Wall Street Journal Nov. 3.North American governments do not want your money getting into the hands of terrorists, they say. But according to Wall Street Journal Nov. 3, they are giving it away to them anyway. And not just a trickle of a few dollars here and there. Originally the Federal Reserve estimated the ISIS funding “oops” as an expensive mistake that cost Americans $3 billion.They were wrong. Not that this number isn’t shocking enough, but they forgot to add an extra digit to that billion dollar mistake. Now it is estimated that the amount of money that has gone right from the US Federal Reserve into the pockets of ISIS is around $13.2 billion dollars.
The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department temporarily shut off the flow of billions of dollars to Iraq’s central bank this summer as concerns mounted that the currency was ending up at Iranian banks and possibly being funneled to Islamic State militants, according to U.S. and Iraqi officials and other people familiar with the matter.
You can see what America is pa?ing for in the slideshow where the Beirut Bureau Chief for the Washington Post, Liz Sl?, documents on Instagram what a former ISIS town looks like. Items that ISIS left behind after Tal Ab?ad, S?ria, was taken over b? the Kurds included, among other things, a beheading block, class lessons on how to down a helicopter, and detailed instructions including graphics on how to make a bomb.Senator John McCain has been sa?ing for a long time that America has wanted to ensure ISIS is armed for a ver? long time. Jeb Bush and the entire Bush famil? have long been suspected of having involvement with Saudi and Iraqi mone? exchanges. Ever?one thought those were just a conspirac? theor?. In the video shown here, a report shows that a high ranking Pakistani intelligence officer divulged that he too had been receiving funds, direct mone? transfers, from America for a ver? long time.Suddenl? the conspirac? theories don’t seem so far fetched. And now America has lost $13 billion dollars to the cause, and all the? are doing is raising their e?ebrows over it.
How do ?ou feel knowing that America is funding ISIS? Are ?ou surprised?
What a liar and evil man!
MW
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