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Navy Seizes Drug Boat In Gulf

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  • Navy Seizes Drug Boat In Gulf

    Navy Seizes Drug Boat In Gulf
    Associated Press
    December 20, 2003

    WASHINGTON - The Navy has seized a boat carrying nearly two tons of hashish in the Persian Gulf, U.S. officials said Friday, in what could be some of the first hard evidence of al-Qaida links to drug smuggling.

    The guided missile destroyer USS Decatur intercepted the 40-foot boat on Monday. Aboard were a dozen men, three of them believed to have al-Qaida connections, and 3,780 pounds of hashish, the Navy said Friday.

    "This is the first empirical evidence I've seen that conclusively links al-Qaida with the drug trade," said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorism expert at RAND, a think tank that often does work for the Pentagon.

    The Decatur seized the boat, a wooden vessel called a dhow, near the Straits of Hormuz, a narrow part of the Persian Gulf where it opens into the Arabian Sea. The area is a known smuggling route for al-Qaida, the Navy said.

    The drugs are worth between $8 million and $10 million, the Navy said.

    Military officials would not say Friday why they believed the boat, its cargo and some of its crew were linked to Osama bin Laden's terrorist network. The boat remained under the Decatur's control and it had not been determined what to do with the men on board, the Navy said.

    Terrorism experts and government officials long have said they believe that al-Qaida makes money through criminal enterprises including the drug trade. A United Nations panel reported last month, for example, that al-Qaida had financed some of its operations through drug trafficking.

    Before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, bin Laden had been sheltered in Afghanistan by the Taliban, which had clear links to the heroin trade through Afghanistan's huge opium poppy crops. Smaller groups linked to al-Qaida, such as Ansar al-Islam in Iraq and Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines, also have been accused of involvement in the drug trade.

    But Hoffman said Monday's seizure was the first indication that al-Qaida was smuggling hashish, a drug made from the resin of marijuana plants that has a long history in the Middle East.

    Smuggling drugs is attractive to al-Qaida because of the huge profit margins involved, said Jimmy Gurule, a former Treasury Department official involved in tracking terrorist financing.

    "One of the things we learned over the past two years about al-Qaida is it's a very adaptable organization with respect not only to its terrorist activities but also its mechanisms for raising money," said Gurule, now a law professor at Notre Dame. "This isn't something that is a surprise, but it's something we should be prepared to address."

    It's impossible to tell how deeply al-Qaida is involved in the drug trade, Hoffman said, because al-Qaida has become expert at hiding its money trail.

    "Hardly anyone has a good handle on their finances," he said.

    Congressional investigators said last week that authorities at both the Treasury and Justice departments were struggling to get a grip on how terrorists may be using alternative means - such as trafficking in gold and diamonds or drugs - to raise and move financial assets.

    Terrorist financiers have been looking for ways to move and conceal money as governments in the United States and abroad have taken steps to prevent them from using the traditional banking system.

    The Decatur is part of the Navy's effort to crack down on smuggling of drugs, weapons, oil and terrorists in the Persian Gulf.

    The U.S. military also plans to sponsor a multinational exercise in the Arabian Sea next month to practice seizing a merchant ship carrying weapons of mass destruction. The scenario mimics the seizure of a shipment of Scud missiles from North Korea last year, which the U.S. eventually had to release to the buyer, Yemen.

    http://www.military.com/NewsContent/...122003,00.html
    "Every man has his weakness. Mine was always just cigarettes."
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