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12/15/2021

Counter ISIS Finance Group Leaders Issue Joint Statement | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Counter ISIS Finance Group Leaders Issue Joint Statement
December 14, 2021

Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS Convenes Fi eenth Finance Working Group Meeting
WASHINGTON – On December 6-7, 2021, the Counter ISIS Finance Group (CIFG) of the Global
Coalition to Defeat ISIS held its fi eenth meeting to discuss global e orts to combat ISIS
financing. The United States, Italy, and Saudi Arabia hosted this meeting via video
conference, joined by over 50 member states and observers. The CIFG is one of four active
working groups of the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS.
“The Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS will relentlessly counter ISIS financing as long as the
terrorist group continues to commit atrocities, indoctrinate new recruits, seek to establish
safe havens, and plot terrorist attacks around the world,” said Anna Morris, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Global A airs. “We must continue to work together to hold ISIS financiers
accountable, prevent the group from generating revenue and using the formal financial
system, and expose ISIS supporters who exploit the charitable sector for raising and
transferring funds.”
The following is a joint statement of the CIFG co-leads:
“The Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS remains committed to dismantling ISIS financial
infrastructure and dissuading extremist sympathizers from sending funds to the group. The
Coalition is deepening and expanding cooperation to identify and disrupt ISIS finance
networks around the world, while taking steps to strengthen oversight of financial systems
and non-profit sectors in vulnerable jurisdictions to prevent their abuse by terrorist groups
and their supporters.
Throughout the two-day CIFG meeting, the participants shared insights into ISIS financing in
Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, as well as received briefings on law enforcement,
judicial, and administrative actions to counter ISIS financiers in these areas.
The group highlighted the reliance of ISIS on informal money services businesses, and in some
cases cash couriers, to transfer funds internationally. While work remains to be done to
address this issue, authorities in several key countries have taken steps to deter money
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Counter ISIS Finance Group Leaders Issue Joint Statement | U.S. Department of the Treasury

remitters from providing financial services to ISIS. The participants observed that ISIS
supporters residing outside conflict zones have been using virtual asset service providers to
send international transfers to ISIS members. These activities were disrupted due to e ective
coordination among relevant government agencies and compliance of local virtual asset
service providers with anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism
standards. Multiple CIFG participants noted that some ISIS financiers continue using
charitable appeals, o en via internet platforms, to raise and transfer funds. The group also
discussed the need for ongoing vigilance to prevent the terrorist groupsʼ abuse of non-profit
organizations.
CIFG participants noted that ISIS maintains between $25-$50 million in cash reserves. The
group also generates hundreds of thousand dollars per month in Iraq and Syria through
looting, extortion, and kidnapping for ransom. The groupʼs monthly expenses in the region
exceed its revenues by hundreds of thousands of dollars. ISIS spends money to support its
branches and networks around the globe; acquire weapons, equipment, and supplies; and
provide stipends to its fighters and their families, many of whom are in detention.
CIFG participants discussed increasing cooperation with regional and local partners to
counter financial support to ISIS branches in Afghanistan and Africa, where the terrorist group
presents an increased threat to international security. ISIS-Khorasanʼs finances have
improved in recent months, but the branch continues to struggle with generating local
revenues. This year, ISIS-Khorasan has received low hundreds of thousands of dollars from
ISIS leadership in Syria and Iraq in addition to tens of thousands of dollars from extortion,
kidnapping for ransom, and private donations. The ISIS branches in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Mozambique, and West Africa also rely on extortion, kidnapping for ransom, and
looting of the local population to generate revenue.
We call on the Global Coalition to work with the entire international community to bankrupt
ISIS and ensure the enduring defeat of this terrorist organization, which continues to conduct
terrorist attacks, commit gross human rights abuses, and spread its violent extremist
ideology worldwide. We encourage counterterrorism partners to share their knowledge and
experiences to strengthen our fight against ISIS financing and defend the international
financial system from abuse by terrorists. CIFG co-leads will continue to foster international
collaboration to enable disruptive actions that contribute to the enduring defeat of ISIS.”
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