Global
money laundering made easy by loose rules on secret
accounts
Terrorists work the levers of global banking laws to move
money that finance their efforts from phony banks to real ones, like
Britain's Barclays Bank, which Osama bin Laden allegedly
used.
NEW
YORK, Sept. 19 — Terrorist networks all over the world depend on the
international bank and corporate secrecy system to hide and move
their money. This structure is allowed to exist by agreement of the
world’s banks and financial powers. A lot of people make money from
it, including the owners and managers of banks that hide customers’
deposits from tax authorities. But an unintended consequence is that
it aids and abets worldwide networks of
terrorists.
If the United
States wants to stop the money flow that supports terrorism, it needs to
cut the pipeline. The administration should rethink its hostility to
international efforts to pierce the bank secrecy essential to terrorists’
money laundering.
TERRORISTS NEED a way to finance operations in dozens of countries
around the globe, to pay for houses, salaries, transport, weapons and
explosives. They need to move millions quickly and without detection. They
can’t carry the cash in suitcases. But transferring millions of dollars
using secret bank accounts and shell companies is easy.
HOW THE
PIPELINE WORKS In about 60
countries around the world, known as “offshore” or “tax haven” countries,
people can set up companies and open accounts without real names or
identification. Phony banks — which are really just letter-drops — funnel
money to real banks. Real banks in the U.S. routinely ask no questions
when the phony banks open “correspondent accounts” to move money here for
their customers. Right now, there’s nothing
in U.S. law to stop the Al-Shamal Islamic Bank in Khartoum, Sudan, from
opening an account in a U.S. bank to wire money to use here or in another
country. That bank was set up by Osama bin Laden. If there’s a stop put on
that bank, it can easy go through a third party in Nauru or Liechtenstein
or some other offshore haven. Because U.S. banks are not required to ask
about the owners of the money, foreign banks bundle cash from numerous
customers and send the lump sum to their correspondent accounts in the
U.S. Then they move the money wherever their clients order.
The Sunday Times of London reports that a suspected
bin Laden lieutenant, Saudi dissident Khalid al-Fawwaz, used an account at
a branch of Barclays Bank in London to finance circulation of bin Laden’s
edicts and contacts with other parts of the organization’s global network.
Khalid al-Fawwaz is being held awaiting extradition proceedings to the
United States for participation in the conspiracy to murder
Americans.
WORKING THE
LEVERS
Swiss federal
prosecutors are investigating whether any money linked to the terrorists
flowed through its banks. According to the “Blick” newspaper, Al Taqwa
Management Organization AG, a financial services company based in Lugano,
in the southern part of the country, had links with Osama bin Laden.
Lugano is notorious as a home for “financial services companies,” whose
function is to discreetly move money, as well as for shell companies and
secret bank accounts. The system is no
surprise to the U.S. government, because America and its allies have used
it, too. BCCI, the Bank of Credit and Commerce International, was a
British-Pakistani bank that used secret offshore accounts to effect a
global money-laundering fraud that cost victims $8 billion. Before it was
shut down in 1991, it was used to fund the Mujahedin, then fighting
the Soviet-supported government of Afghanistan. The money came from U.S.
and Saudi intelligence. Now many of the
Mujahedin are members of bin Laden’s network. They know all about
how to launder money through the international bank secrecy
system.
CUTTING OFF THE
MONEY If the U.S. wants to stop
the money flow that supports terrorism, it needs to cut that pipeline. The
administration should rethink its hostility to international efforts to
pierce the bank secrecy essential to terrorists’ money
laundering. The first step should be
immediate passage of legislation sponsored by Michigan Sen. Carl Levin
(and opposed by Republican leaders last year). Levin is pressing to make
his bill part of the anti-terrorism package that will be considered by
Congress. The measure has two key elements: It would bar U.S. banks from providing banking
services to foreign shell banks with no physical presence in any
country. It would also require U.S. banks to conduct in
depth investigations when opening accounts for $1 million or more for
foreigners or correspondent accounts for offshore banks or banks in
countries with high money-laundering risks.
A GLOBAL
RESPONSIBILITY Other countries
also need to change their practices. In London, a favorite center for
Middle East money, banks connected to the Saudi royal family enjoy
“sovereign immunity,” which England grants to monarchies. They are exempt
from the scrutiny of the Financial Service Authority, which supervises
banks and tries to head off money laundering.
Now, British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown has called for
global action to counter terrorist money laundering. He would give
security services access to secret banking systems in countries such as
Switzerland and require reporting to international institutions of
“suspicious transactions involving what may be terrorist activities” so
that there is “no hiding place for terrorist money. ” European Union
governments are meeting to adopt a common position on the issue this
weekend. The Bush Administration needs to
change its policy that has been hostile toward challenging bank secrecy.
It needs to get behind and strengthen existing efforts by the OECD and the
G-7 to crack down on this perfidious system. We must realize that
globalized terrorism is financed by globalized money.
Lucy Komisar is a New York journalist who writes on foreign affairs and
in recent years has focused on the offshore bank and corporate secrecy
system.