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6/6/2022

Remarks by Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson Marking the Fifth A…

Remarks by Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and
Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson Marking the Fifth
Anniversary of the Terrorist Financing Targeting Center (TFTC)
June 6, 2022

Today, Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson
delivered virtual remarks at the Terrorist Financing Targeting Center (TFTC) Five-Year Event in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. This event marks the five-year anniversary of the TFTC, a multilateral
body created to strengthen cooperation among seven countries – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and the United States – to disrupt terrorist financing networks and
related activities of mutual concern.
Under Secretary Nelsonʼs remarks coincide with TFTC member statesʼ coordinated joint
designation of 16 entities from a range of regional terrorist groups previously
designated by the United States.

As Prepared for Delivery
Good a ernoon. It is my pleasure to join you virtually for this occasion. I look forward to
visiting your countries and meeting with you in the future.
Iʼd like to thank His Excellency Abdullah al-Oeis for their kind remarks, and for the support we
have received from your government as co-chair for the TFTC. We would not be where we are
today without your personal support for this important initiative.
Today, I will focus on TFTCʼs accomplishments and approach, I will then highlight your planned
discussions for this weekʼs meetings, and finally, then I will talk about emerging threats and
trends we see in terrorist financing.
The Biden Administration is focused on advancing multilateral initiatives, and the TFTC is a
prime example. For Treasury, this is a unique institution to co-chair; in no other part of the
world are our multilateral e orts formalized in such a structure. Our work is truly a
collaborative endeavor across a range of government organizations from your countries.
In preparing for this event, I got a chance to dive deeper into the TFTC and I was struck by the
tenacity of this organization and the strength of its membersʼ commitment to its success.
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6/6/2022

Remarks by Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson Marking the Fifth A…

This commitment is evidenced in the six rounds of designations of over 70 di erent
individuals or entities and the ten capacity-building workshops youʼve conducted over the
past five years.
Treasury remains committed to the TFTCʼs mission: in the past year alone dozens of our top
intelligence analysts, policy experts, and regional attaches traveled to attend TFTC meetings
on five separate occasions.
However, what is not captured in these numbers is the uniqueness of the context in which the
TFTC operates and its truly multilateral and holistic approach.
Our approach is holistic by necessity; our success relies on addressing the full scope of
terrorist financing. The agenda in the coming days is a testament to this perspective.
First, we must establish a common understanding of the scope of terrorist financing.
Tomorrow in your brainstorming session on Syria, you will discuss di erent perspectives on
the illicit financing risks emanating from that jurisdiction.
To facilitate that discussion, we sent our top experts from our O ice of Intelligence and
Analysis to brief you on where we see the highest threats and vulnerabilities. Together you
will discuss the destabilizing terrorist and illicit finance threats emanating from Syria, and
how best to work together to counter them. I look forward to hearing the conclusions of
your conversations as well as the possible opportunities to jointly counter these threats.
Our experts will also provide briefings on captagon tra icking from Syria throughout the
region; the Syrian regimeʼs ties to Iran, including the IRGC-QF and Lebanese Hizballah; and ISIS
financing.
I understand that this is the TFTCʼs second brainstorming session, and represents an
important way to share our perspectives on discrete terrorist financing threats.
These discussions shouldnʼt end with identifying the problem. Your work will continue to
address the broader systemic issues that give rise to these terrorist financing networks, and
how TFTC members can collectively contribute to regional security and stability.
In the a ernoon, youʼll discuss how Treasuryʼs approach to ensuring humanitarian assistance
in Syria reaches those most in need without empowering illicit actors who seek to divert
these funds.
The U.S. government prioritizes expanding humanitarian access throughout Syria to alleviate
the su ering of the Syrian people. As part of this commitment, in November 2021, Treasury
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6/6/2022

Remarks by Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson Marking the Fifth A…

expanded the authorization for non-governmental organizations to engage in humanitarian
related transactions and activities.
Additionally, last month Treasury issued Syria General License 22. This new authorization is
designed to support stabilization e orts in non-regime held areas of northeast and northwest
Syria, while also deterring the human rights abuses and other malign activity of the Syrian
regime.
We look forward to hearing about your approach and how youʼre ensuring your countriesʼ
humanitarian initiatives are protected from illicit finance schemes.
We are committed to strengthening our e orts to counter terrorist financing. We must
remain vigilant in addressing this evolving threat. I want to highlight two trends and discuss
how the TFTC is uniquely positioned to meet these challenges.
First, the global financial architecture is evolving. How we move and store money has
changed dramatically, with digital assets and financial technologies becoming a larger part of
peopleʼs everyday lives.
As we seek to harness the benefits of these technologies, we also must proactively identify
trends and risks and share this information with our partners.
Sharing information with key allies will assist in minimizing potential blind spots in our risk
assessment. A collaborative approach to responsible innovation, aligned with the FATF
standards, can help ensure illicit actors are not able to seek refuge in or financially abuse
permissive jurisdictions.
The TFTCʼs information-sharing and capacity-building e orts can be leveraged to address
these emerging issues, and I look forward to seeing how these lines of e ort are advanced in
the coming years to deepen our understanding.
Second, the structure of key terrorist groups has changed dramatically since the TFTC was
founded five years ago. Terrorist groups are becoming increasingly decentralized and are
adapting to their loss of territory by exploiting global financial and information systems to
support their operations, while expanding their control and influence into new regions.
As these terrorist groups evolve, we must leverage the full scope of authorities to thwart
their operations. In part, this entails breaking down barriers across our government
organizations. The TFTC is already doing this, as evidenced by the range of di erent agencies
represented in the room today, and by incorporating di erent perspectives and authorities
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Remarks by Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson Marking the Fifth A…

into the workshops. The joint TFTC-Department of Justice workshop on June 8 on terrorist
financing prosecutions is a key example of how we can learn from case studies of how to
better use both our law enforcement, regulatory, and supervisory authorities to counter
terrorist networks.
As Iʼm sure this group can appreciate, the financing of terrorism is central to terroristsʼ
operational success, and our ability to disrupt their financial networks can have an outsized
influence on countering terrorism more broadly.
Our actions must be both forceful, multilateral, and strategic. That is why we must redouble
our e orts to take collective and multilateral disruptive action. I was pleased that for the
sixth tranche of designations that we are announcing today, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and the
UAE proposed targets.
We need to continue to use the TFTCʼs coordination mechanism and steadily increase the
pace of our joint actions. We are counting on your representatives to come forward with
targets to nominate.
As I mentioned at the outset, TFTCʼs success relies on its unique collaborative process, and it
cannot be successful in this line of e ort if only a few countries contribute.
In closing, thank you for the important work each of your delegations has done to protect the
international financial system. It is critical work that I hope you continue with even more
energy and creativity. I look forward to hearing your thoughts on how you envision TFTC
evolving and wish you a productive series of meetings over the next couple of days.

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