THE RELENTLESS MARCH OF THE 'ISLAMIC STATE'
Deutsche Welle
Deutsche Welle
In the aftermath of its conquest of
Mosul, the jihadi organization ISIS has been recognized as the richest
terrorist organization in the world. Where does its money come from?
Where does ISIS gets its money?
During its conquest of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, ISIS fighters looted more
than 500 billion Iraqi Dinar, worth about $420 million (308 million euros) at
current exchange rates. ISIS is a rebel army composed of Sunni jihadis that
calls itself the "Islamic State of Iraq and greater Syria." Its aim
is to establish a theocratic Sunni caliphate in the region.
Iraqi officials estimate that the
group now has about $2 billion in its war chest. What remains controversial is
where the bulk of its money comes from.
Iraq’s Shiite-dominated government
accuses Saudi Arabia of supporting the ISIS jihadis. On Tuesday (17.06.2014),
Iraqi Premier Nouri al-Maliki said "we hold Saudi Arabia responsible"
for the financial and moral support given to ISIS.
The USA, which is Saudi Arabia’s
most important ally, has rejected the Iraqi Premier’s accusation. Jen Psaki, a
speaker for the US State Department, said on Tuesday evening that al-Maliki’s
accusation was "inaccurate and humiliating."
Money from the Gulf States?
"There is no publicly
accessible proof that the government of a state has been involved in the
creation or financing of ISIS as an organisation," said Charles Lister,
Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar, a subsidiary of the US
think-tank Brookings Institution.
Others take a different view. Günter
Meyer is Director of the Center for Research into the Arabic World at the
University of Mainz. Meyer says he has no doubt about where ISIS gets its
funding. "The most important source of ISIS financing to date has been
support coming out of the Gulf states, primarily Saudi Arabia but also Qatar,
Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates," Meyer told Deutsche Welle. The Gulf
states' motivation in financing groups like ISIS was to support their fight
against the regime of President Bashar al Assad in Syria, according to Meyer.
Three quarters of the Syrian population are Sunni Muslims, but Syria is ruled
by an elite drawn mostly from the Alawite minority. The Alawites are an
offshoot of Shiite Islam.
Recently, however, the government of
Saudi Arabia has recognized the dangers of this policy. "Saudi citizens now compose the largest
contingent of foreign fighters in ISIS. When those fighters come home, there's
a danger that they might turn against the Saudi regime," Meyer said. But
there are reasons to believe that financing for ISIS continues to flow out of
Saudi Arabia, "less from the Saudi government than from rich Saudis".
Money from oil and extortion
Additional key financing sources for
ISIS, according to Meyer, are the oil fields of northern Syria. "ISIS was
able to get those oil fields under their control. They use trucks to bring oil
over the border into Turkey. That's an important source of funding for them."
The view of Charles Lister at the
Brookings Doha Center is that ISIS is largely able to fund itself. "ISIS
has made an effort to establish networks in society that generate a continuing
flow of money." As an example, Lister points to the systematic extortion
conducted by ISIS in the recently conquered city of Mosul.
"The exortion affects small
businesses and big companies, construction firms, and if the rumors are true,
even local government representatives," Lister told DW. "In addition,
it's suspected that the organization levies taxes in the areas that it
completely controls - for example Raqqa in northeastern Syria."
Günter Meyer at the University of
Mainz thinks there is no chance that money is flowing to ISIS from Sunni
circles connected to the former dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein. The goals of
ISIS are too different from those of people in Hussein's network. Both groups
want to topple the Shiite government of Iraq, but ISIS wants to establish an
Islamic theocracy, whereas the Sunnis from Hussein's Baath Party want to
establish a secular democracy, says Meyer.
Money for Jihad
ISIS' biggest financial coup so far
was no doubt the looting of the central bank in Mosul, which brought them the
equivalent of about $429 million in cash. Additional banks in Mosul and other
areas under ISIS control were also plundered, according to Meyer. In a Twitter
post, the British commentator Eliot Higgins, writing under his pseudonym Moses
Brown, noted that ISIS can buy "a lot of jihad" with that much money.
"With $429 million, ISIS could pay 60,000 fighters $600 a month for a
whole year."
It's estimated that ISIS has around
10,000 fighters at the moment. How the organization spends its money, however,
is not known in detail. "It's assumed that ISIS pays the foreign fighters
in its ranks, but perhaps it pays all its troops," according to Charles Lister.
"In the areas under ISIS control, the organization subsidizes bread,
water, and fuel, and also finances the maintenance and operation of basic
public services. All that costs money."
ISIS will probably use some of the money to buy
military equipment, in Günter Meyer's view. During its conquest of Mosul, the
ISIS fighters bagged a lot of US weapons and vehicles. "With their current
financial power, it will be easy for ISIS to buy additional high-quality
weapons on international armaments markets."
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