Washington: The ISIS terror group made nearly $1 billion in total revenue last year, half of which came from the sale of oil, and earned as much $350 million per year by extorting funds from the local population, a top US Treasury Department official has said.
The source of ISIS's income include oil and gas sales, extortion and taxation, external donations, kidnapping-for-ransom, and previously, bank looting, Daniel Glaser, the Treasury's assistant secretary for terrorist financing said.
"We estimate that in 2015, ISIL made approximately USD 1 billion dollars in total revenue, USD 500 million of which came from the sale of oil, primarily through populations under its control," Glaser said, using the US's preferred acronym for ISIS.
"We also estimate that ISIL may have earned as much $350 million per year, by extorting funds from the local population and in connection with the financial and commercial activity taking place in the territory it controls," he said yesterday in written testimony for a House of Representatives committee hearing on security threats.
ISIS also gained considerable funds from seizing control of state-owned banks in northern and western Iraq in 2014 and early 2015, he told the lawmakers.
"These funds from the bank vaults were estimated to be at least half a billion dollars at the time of capture, making them an important, albeit non-renewable, source of financing for ISIL in its earlier days," Glaser said.
Other less significant sources of revenue include kidnapping-for-ransom.
"We estimated that ISIL earned between $20 and $45 million from KFR in 2014. However, we assess revenue from KFR declined substantially in 2015 and 2016 owing to the greatly reduced presence of potential Western hostages in or near the territories it controls," he said.
The senior official said the ISIS clearly has vast financial resources, but the Obama administration has seen indications that America's efforts to disrupt ISIS's sources of revenue are bearing fruit.
Through airstrikes, the Coalition has directly targeted ISIL's entire oil and natural gas supply chain: from oil fields, to refineries, to tanker trucks, targeting ISIS's primary source of revenue, he claimed.
"While difficult to quantify, the strikes have undoubtedly impeded ISIL's ability to produce, sell, and profit from oil as it had been doing," he said.
Glaser also said that recent Coalition strikes have also reduced the levels of cash in ISIS-controlled territory.
US-led Coalition airstrikes have targeted ISIS's cash storage sites, destroying tens of millions, and possibly more than 100 million dollars, and eliminated senior ISIS officials, including the group's de facto finance minister. For the first time since it proclaimed its caliphate in June 2014, the Islamic State has come under financial pressure following a sharp drop in oil production in territories it controls among other measures, a recent UN report had said.
The source of ISIS's income include oil and gas sales, extortion and taxation, external donations, kidnapping-for-ransom, and previously, bank looting, Daniel Glaser, the Treasury's assistant secretary for terrorist financing said.
"We estimate that in 2015, ISIL made approximately USD 1 billion dollars in total revenue, USD 500 million of which came from the sale of oil, primarily through populations under its control," Glaser said, using the US's preferred acronym for ISIS.
ISIS also gained considerable funds from seizing control of state-owned banks in northern and western Iraq in 2014 and early 2015, he told the lawmakers.
Advertisement
Other less significant sources of revenue include kidnapping-for-ransom.
Advertisement
The senior official said the ISIS clearly has vast financial resources, but the Obama administration has seen indications that America's efforts to disrupt ISIS's sources of revenue are bearing fruit.
Advertisement
"While difficult to quantify, the strikes have undoubtedly impeded ISIL's ability to produce, sell, and profit from oil as it had been doing," he said.
Advertisement
US-led Coalition airstrikes have targeted ISIS's cash storage sites, destroying tens of millions, and possibly more than 100 million dollars, and eliminated senior ISIS officials, including the group's de facto finance minister. For the first time since it proclaimed its caliphate in June 2014, the Islamic State has come under financial pressure following a sharp drop in oil production in territories it controls among other measures, a recent UN report had said.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
What Pak's Ex ISI Chief, Facing Court Martial, Is Accused Of Pak Ex ISI Chief Faiz Hameed Taken Into Army Custody Ahead Of Court Martial "Was Playing With Ideas": Lawyer Of Suspect In Taylor Swift Concert Attack Plot How Extreme Weather Is Leading To Rise In Child Marriages In Pakistan "Probably First Time Since '87/88...": Omar Abdullah On J&K Poll Dates "Assessment Failure": Kolkata Police Commissioner On Vandalism At Hospital Man Bites Off Part Of Father's Thumb During Argument Over Property: Cops Sikh Woman, Minor Son Kidnapped By 2 In Pakistan Rescued: Cops Chhattisgarh NEET UG 2024 Counselling Schedule Released, Check Details Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.