The
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has crude, stomach-turning tactics when
it comes to dealing with its enemy, but experts say that its
moneymaking methods are highly sophisticated, especially for such a new
terror group.
Here's a look at how ISIS has made (and taken) millions:
Oil production and smuggling
ISIS
makes between $1 million and $2 million each day from oil sales,
numerous sources tell CNN. The oil comes mostly from refineries and
wells that ISIS controls in northern Iraq and northern Syria.
The
militants smuggle oil into southern Turkey, for example, and sell it to
people who desperately need it just to carry on some semblance of
everyday life.
The United States-led coalition fighting ISIS has repeatedly targeted ISIS oil assets in an effort to, in part, damage this arm of the group's financial system.
ISIS is estimated to produce about 44,000 barrels a day in Syria and 4,000 barrels a day in Iraq, according to Foreign Policy. A Kurdish newspaper has published the names of people involved with ISIS and its oil enterprise, the magazine reported.
Some
on the list were associated with oil smuggling under former Iraqi
dictator Saddam Hussein, Foreign Policy said, as were those associated
with a Toyota branch in Irbil that sells ISIS trucks.
Through
its oil operations, ISIS appears to be trying to establish a
self-sufficient state in the "Sunni triangle" in west and north Iraq,
said Luay al-Khatteeb, founder and director of the Iraq Energy Institute.
Today, ISIS controls approximately 6 million people in Iraq and Syria, he said, and "that is a lot of people who need fuel."
Ransoms from kidnappings
In
2012, the U.S. Treasury Department estimated that al Qaeda and its
affiliates had accumulated $120 million from ransoms over the previous
eight years.
ISIS was once aligned with al Qaeda. The two groups are thought to operate separately but share similarities.
A 2014 New York Times investigation found that since 2008, al Qaeda and its affiliates had received $125 million from ransoms, including $66 million in 2013.
A Swedish company reportedly paid $70,000 to save an employee whom ISIS abducted.
Though
officials publicly deny paying ransoms, the French purportedly have a
policy of negotiating with militant groups to free its citizens. ISIS
kidnapped Nicolas Henin, Pierre Torres, Edouard Elias and Didier
François, in 2013 in Syria. They were released in April 2014, CNN national security analyst Peter Bergen said in a report that asked whether paying ransoms is a wise strategy.
The
United States has a policy of not doing that, and the recent executions
of U.S. and other Western ISIS hostages have sparked debate over
whether that should change. ISIS demanded hundreds of millions of
dollars for American journalist James Foley, said Philip Balboni, the
CEO of GlobalPost, the outlet for which Foley freelanced.
ISIS beheaded Foley and released a video of the slaying.
The terrorists also told the Japanese government to pay a $200 million ransom to free two Japanese citizens. Japan did not negotiate, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said. ISIS slaughtered the men.
Looting and selling stolen artifacts and antiquities
ISIS
allows locals to dig at ancient sites as long as those people give ISIS
a percentage of the monetary value of anything found, according to a
September 2014 New York Times opinion piece
written by three people who had recently returned from southern Turkey
and interviewed people who live and work in ISIS-controlled territory.
ISIS'
system of profiteering from antiquities thieving is very complicated,
the three said, adding that for some areas along the Euphrates River,
ISIS leaders encourage semiprofessional field crews to dig.
"ISIS
has caused irreparable damage to Syria's cultural heritage," the
writers said, and it's crucial that the digging and smuggling of
antiquities be stopped because Syria's history is essentially part of
its identity. Leaving some of the targeted heritage intact, they said,
"will be critical in helping the people of Syria reconnect with the
symbols that unite them across religious and political lines."
CNN has extensively reported on ISIS' destruction of some ancient and deeply meaningful sites in Iraq. Officials in Iraq have said ISIS has blown up shrines such as the tomb of Jonah.
Qais
Hussain Rashid, director general of Iraqi museums, told CNN that ISIS
militants "cut these reliefs and sell them to criminals and antique
dealers." He gestured to an ornate carving that's thousands of years
old. "Usually they cut off the head, leaving the legs, because the head
is the valuable part."
As if pillaging
weren't enough, ISIS simply damages fragile historical sites as if they
were empty storefronts for the taking. Rashid said that ISIS has used
the ancient ruined city of Hatra, or al-Hadr in Arabic, which dates back
to the third century B.C., as a training ground, weapons depot and a
place to murder prisoners.
'Taxes,' aka extortion
In
2014, ISIS gained control of large swaths of Iraq and Syria and set out
to create civil and administrative entities as if it were a legitimate
state. That is, after all, what the militants have claimed to be after
-- a caliphate, or an Islamic state led by one person, a successor to
the Prophet Mohammed.
States demand
taxes. In ISIS-controlled areas, to get anything done -- or to survive
-- the people pay a fee to the terror group. Businesses are taxed if
they want to have essential things like electricity and security,
experts say.
Drivers who want to move
through a checkpoint must hand over cash. When it's used more and more,
extortion can seem to a terrified and traumatized populace as a normal
tax system, Joseph Thorndike, the director of Tax Analysts' Tax History Project, wrote in Forbes.
Stealing
Sometimes
there's no pretense such as "taxing." ISIS has stolen money, too. In
June 2014, the group raided several banks in Mosul and stole an
estimated $500 million, though the full amount is unconfirmed, according
to global intelligence firm Stratfor. In Syria, ISIS has seized control
of oil facilities, taking over from rebel group al-Nusra, which didn't
fight back.
Organs harvesting and sale?
The Iraqi ambassador to the United Nations caused a sensation this week when
he said that bodies have been found mutilated, and openings have been
carved out of the backs of the corpses. To Mohamed Alhakim, that
indicated "some parts are missing."
He said it's possible that ISIS is harvesting and trafficking the organs of dead civilians.
There
is tremendous skepticism about that, particularly considering how hard
it would be to preserve organs in crude and unsanitary war environments.
Mark Lyall Grant, Britain's ambassador to the U.N., said there was no proof or evidence to support Alhakim's assertion.
Control of crops
Mouaz
Moustafa, the executive director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force in
Washington, told CNN that Raqqa, ISIS' de facto Syrian capital, is a
kind of breadbasket. "They've got the cotton and the wheat." he said.
The United States has targeted grain silos that ISIS controls.
A separate economy?
Last year, ISIS announced that its "Treasury Department" would start minting its own
gold, silver and copper coins for its "Official Islamic State Financial
System." It's not clear if this has any value. The move is "purely
dedicated to God," ISIS declared, and will remove Muslims from the
"global economic system that is based on satanic usury."
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