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TERROR WARS
UK official says 'economic warfare' needed against IS
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) April 26, 2016


US military conducts cyber attacks on IS
Washington (AFP) April 26, 2016 - The US military is now conducting cyber attacks on the Islamic State group, a general said Tuesday as the Pentagon looks to accelerate the fight against the jihadists.

A US-led coalition has been striking IS fighters in Iraq and Syria since August 2014, and officials have long stated the importance of using cyber techniques such as overloading IS networks to limit the group's communications and ability to reach potential new recruits.

"We have now begun to use our exquisite cyber capabilities in this fight against Daesh," Baghdad-based Major General Peter Gersten told Pentagon reporters, using an acronym that comes from the group's name in Arabic.

He did not elaborate except to say the effort is "highly coordinated" and has been "very effective."

In February, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and the US military's top officer, General Joe Dunford, said the United States was determined to "accelerate" the anti-IS campaign, and indicated cyber warfare would play an increasingly important role in doing so.

Earlier this month, Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert Work said: "We are dropping cyberbombs" on the IS group.

The New York Times published a story Sunday saying the US Cyber Command had placed "implants" in IS networks that let experts monitor the group's behavior and ultimately imitate or alter commanders' messages so they unwittingly direct fighters to areas likely to be hit by drone or plane strikes.

The US Cyber Command is charged with protecting America's military and some civilian networks from attacks, as well as deploying its own offensive cyber strategies if needed.

By 2018, it will have more than 6,000 military and civilian technical experts working across 133 teams.

One such team, comprising about 65 people, today works in the Middle East and carries out cyber operations against IS networks.

Admiral Michael Rogers, head of both Cyber Command and the National Security Agency, declined to provide any additional information Tuesday.

"We have publicly acknowledged that we are using cyber as another tool against ISIL," Rogers said at a Georgetown University cybersecurity conference, using an acronym for the IS group.

"I want them to be aware: We are going to contest you on the kinetic battlefield, we are going to contest you with information dynamics, we are committed to this fight," he added.

The US-led coalition against the Islamic State is squeezing the group's revenues from oil, taxation and financial markets but it needs to step up its campaign of "economic warfare", a leading British official said Tuesday.

Air Vice-Marshal Edward Stringer, who is leading British government efforts to disrupt IS financing alongside international allies, said the jihadist group was showing signs of the pressure on its finances.

But the military chief told parliament's foreign affairs committee: "It's a pseudo-state and we need to think in terms of how you take a state structure apart. So we're involved in economic warfare."

Experts have noted a recent reduction in the IS group's oil production, largely down to air strikes by the US-led coalition and Russia.

The IHS research group last week said production in IS-controlled territory was down from 33,000 barrels to 21,000 a day since the middle of last year.

It said the group's total revenues had fallen 30 percent from around $80 million (71 million euros) in mid 2015 to $56 million in March 2016.

Stringer said oil still represented around 40 percent of the jihadists' revenue, but noted that it was largely sold within their territory, where there was a captive customer base who could not negotiate on price.

Another 40 percent comes from extortion, taxation and the local cash economy, with the remaining 20 percent from selling antiquities, donations and other sources, according to British government estimates.

These revenues are also under strain from air strikes that have reduced IS territory, and thus its tax base, and which have destroyed stores of cash in northern Iraq worth "hundreds of millions" of dollars, Stringer said.

Stringer said there were signs that the coalition's actions were beginning to take their toll.

"We are starting to see evidence of corruption and embezzlement within the high command, or the senior people within Daesh, and we are starting to see more arbitrary taxation," Stringer said.

But he added: "As we understand exactly how that taxation works, how they run the economy, and how we start to attack those elements which they need to run the war machine and the enterprise -- without killing off the elements of the economy that the local civilians absolutely require to keep life going -- then that's the area we need to look at next."

US pressure on the Iraq government has also forced the Iraqi central bank to tighten up its dollar auctions, amid concerns that IS was using them make money through unregulated exchange houses.

At a previous hearing, the committee heard evidence that the jihadist group had been making $25 million a month through these kind of transactions.

The US Federal Reserve temporarily suspended the delivery of dollars to the Iraq central bank last year amid concerns about the auctions. The bank responded by banning 142 money exchange houses from participating.

ar/nol/pdw

IHS Global Insight


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