By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30, 2014 – U.S. national security officials
have long been worried about the nexus between terrorists and transnational
criminal organizations.
That’s because these developed global networks also carry
the potential of trafficking in weapons of mass destruction and related
materials.
“The same networks and same recombinant pipelines that are
used to successfully move an enormous amount of a multitude of illicit products
-- from cocaine to weapons to bulk cash to human beings -- can easily be used
and likely will be used for illicit proliferation purposes,” said Douglas Farah
of IBI Consultants. He spoke at a recent Proliferation Security Initiative
table top exercise sponsored by U.S. Southern Command that examined ways
nations can work together to combat these networks.
Transnational criminal organizations have long been a
challenge in Southern Command’s area of responsibility. Colombian rebels, who
have fought the government in Bogota since the 1960’s have used drug smuggling
to finance their operations.
Hezbollah -- the Iranian-sponsored terror group -- has long
been active in South America including being implicated in the deadly bombing
of a Jewish center in Buenos Aires in 1994, as well as more recent accusations
of being involved in laundering drug money from the region.
In 2011, then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Navy
Adm. Mike Mullen said the growth of transnational crime in Africa -- notably
for drugs -- has also touched on a number of other problem areas including
human trafficking and syndicates working with terror organizations. Such
organized crime, Mullen said, “is not just about drugs, … it’s immigration,
it’s people, it’s weapons.”
“As criminal and terrorist networks increasingly overlap and
find new and innovative ways to work together when it is mutually beneficial,
the likelihood of [WMD-related trafficking] increases,” Farah said.
The table top exercise in Miami brought together fourteen
PSI-endorsing nations from across the Western Hemisphere, as well as Australia
and Poland, united in their commitment to stopping or disrupting shipments of
WMDs and WMD-related materials.
“In the Western Hemisphere, we have an opportunity to get
ahead of the threat, and in Miami we saw that the region is motivated to
cooperate in new ways. Interdiction -- consistent with national laws and
international legal frameworks -- can have a strategic effect through
cooperation,” said Rebecca K.C. Hersman, deputy assistant secretary of defense
for countering weapons of mass destruction.
How to counter the emerging threat was another focus. Under
the Proliferation Security Initiative, there is now a more systematic capacity
building effort called the Critical Capabilities and Practices framework. The
Miami exercise was the first presentation of this framework and an associated
toolkit that provides specific measures to enhance a nation’s capability to
interdict -- from legal tools and rapid decision making best practices to
operational training, in concert with other U.S. government programs like the
U.S. State Department’s Export Control and Related Border Security Program.
More than 100 countries have endorsed PSI. They cooperate to
enhance interoperability and improve national capacities to act with speed and
effectiveness to stop WMD, their delivery systems, and related items. PSI
participants are addressing the proliferation challenge on all fronts – air,
land, and sea transport of WMD, their delivery systems, and related items,
financial transactions in support of proliferation, and networks of persons
engaged in the deadly trade.
The next major PSI exercise, Fortune Guard 14, will be
hosted by U.S. Pacific Command in August.
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