Hezbollah Rise Now – Latin America
Hezbollah is active in Latin America – there have been multiple bombings and US investigations prove.
Karmon, Interdisciplinary Center Institute for Counter-Terrorism Senior Research Scholar, 10
(Ely, September/October 2010, “Iran Challenges the United States in Its Backyard, in Latin America,” American Foreign Policy Interests, Volume: 32, Issue: 5, page 287, Academic Search Complete, Accessed 7-7-2013. RH)
The Hezbollah presence and nefarious activity in South America is well documented. It was behind the two deadliest terrorist attacks in the continent’s history: the Israeli embassy and Jewish community center bombings in Buenos Aires. Hezbollah also established a significant presence in the ‘‘triborder area’’ (TBA) where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay converge, using local businesses, drug trafficking, and contraband networks to launder funds for terrorist operations worldwide.84
Since 9/11, under U.S. pressure, local governments in the triborder area and other countries such as Chile and Colombia have monitored and discovered part of the wide Hezbollah network active in the continent.85 However, in spite of some arrests of important activists in Paraguay, Brazil, and Chile, mainly for economic crimes or narcotics trafficking, this large Hezbollah network continues to be active on the continent.86
Increased focus on the TBA after Hezbollah linked bombings in Buenos Aires and again after the September 11 attacks in the United States produced an increased understanding of Hezbollah’s fund-raising operations and led Hezbollah to shift its fund-raising operations to other Latin American countries where their location, nature, and extent are largely unknown.87
Hezbollah’s promotion of radical religious ideology identifies Shia diasporas as strategically valuable to terrorist operations and provides several important policy implications for their treatment by host nations determined to combat terrorist operations.88
Hezbollah Rise Now – Venezuela
Venezuela is a state sponsor of terrorism
Poe, Texas Representative, chair of the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, 13
(Ted. "HEZBOLLAH’S STRATEGIC SHIFT: A GLOBAL TERRORIST THREAT." 113th Congress. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Congress, Washington DC. 20 May 2013. Address. JMR)
Venezuela's internal security apparatus has been organized and directed by Cuba, a country designated by the U.S. State Department as a state sponsor of terrorism. That same report cited Venezuela's "economic, financial and diplomatic cooperation with Iran .... " Chavez's aides make no secret of ongoing oil shipments to a third terrorist state, Syria. Just as Hezbollah, Cuba, Syria and Iran are considered terrorist threats to U.S. national security interests, Venezuela's crucial support for each of them should be, too. Although this support may not pose a classical conventional threat, it is precisely the kind of asymmetrical tactics that our enemies favor today.
The chavista regime also has served as the principal interlocutor on Iran's behalf with other like-minded heads of state in the region, primarily Rafael Correa (of Ecuador) and Evo Morales (of Bolivia), both members of the Chavez-sponsored Bolivarian alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) and both 'of whom have established dubious networks with criminal transnational groups.
Venezuela is a key supporter of Hezbollah—offers safe havens, diplomatic immunity, and proximity to the US
Poe, Texas Representative, chair of the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, 13
(Ted. "HEZBOLLAH’S STRATEGIC SHIFT: A GLOBAL TERRORIST THREAT." 113th Congress. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Congress, Washington DC. 20 May 2013. Address. JMR)
In recent congressional testimony, investigative journalist Doug Farah describes "the merging of [Hugo Chavez's] Bolivarian Revolution's criminal-terrorist pipeline activities and those of the criminal-terrorist pipeline of radical extremist groups (Hezbollah in particular) supported by the Iranian regime. "xxvi Such ties are invaluable to groups like Hezbollah, as they afford them protection, safe havens in which to operate, and even diplomatic status and immunity. In short, Venezuela plays a singular role as a platform for the Hezbollah threat in the Americas. It is important to bear in mind that Venezuela is not just another developing country that is unable to control its territory. Venezuela is an oil-rich state that has collected about $1.1 trillion in oil revenue in the last decade. It also is not just an isolated hostile state: Venezuela has collected $28 billion in loans from China in the last two years, and has purchased at least $9 billion in loans from the Russians in the last decade.
Venezuela allows Hezbollah operations in Venezuela – the regime is apologetic in the face of terrorist activity
Karmon, Interdisciplinary Center Institute for Counter-Terrorism Senior Research Scholar, 10
(Ely, September/October 2010, “Iran Challenges the United States in Its Backyard, in Latin America,” American Foreign Policy Interests, Volume: 32, Issue: 5, page 288, Academic Search Complete, Accessed 7-7-2013. RH)
According to The Los Angeles Times, a credible intelligence source claimed that Hezbollah and the Revolutionary Guard of Iran have formed terrorist cells to kidnap Jews in South America and smuggle them to Lebanon. The source alleged that Venezuelans have been recruited at Caracas’s airport to provide information about Jewish travelers.92
In June 2008 the U.S. Treasury Department froze the assets of two Venezuelans after having designated them as Hezbollah supporters. Ghazi Nasr al Din, a Venezuelan diplomat of Lebanese ancestry, is accused of using his position at embassies in the Middle East to raise funds for Hezbollah and ‘‘discuss operational issues with senior officials’’ of the militia. In late January 2006 he facilitated the travel of two Hezbollah representatives to the Lebanese parliament to Caracas to solicit donations for Hezbollah and to announce the opening of a Hezbollah-sponsored community center and office in Venezuela. He is currently assigned to Venezuela’s embassy in Lebanon. Fawzi Kanan, a Caracas based travel agent, allegedly facilitated travel for Hezbollah members and discussed ‘‘possible kidnappings and terrorist attacks’’ with senior Hezbollah officials in Lebanon.93
Instead of opening an investigation, Chavez said that the world was using the allegations to ‘‘make a move’’ against him.94
A Kuwaiti newspaper reported that Hezbollah was training young Venezuelans in military camps in south Lebanon to prepare them for attacking American targets.95 It was reported a few months later that the Venezuelan minister of the interior, Tayek al-Ayssami, was working with Ghazi Nasr al-Din to recruit young Venezuelans of Arab descent that were supportive of the Chavez regime to train in Lebanon with Hezbollah in order to prepare them for asymmetric warfare against the United States in the event of a confrontation. According to this report, Hezbollah also established training camps inside Venezuela, complete with ammunition and explosives.96
Chavez is perhaps the most open apologist for Hezbollah in the hemisphere. During the Israeli–Hezbollah War in 2006, Chavez withdrew the Venezuelan ambassador to Israel. He later accused Israel of conducting its defensive war in ‘‘the fascist manner of Hitler.’’97
It comes as no surprise that Hezbollah’s director of international relations, Nawaf Musawi, attended an April 2008 ceremony at Venezuela’s embassy in Beirut commemorating the sixth anniversary of the defeat of the anti-Chavez uprising in Venezuela. As an invited speaker, Musawi praised the survival of President Chavez’s revolution while denouncing the United States and ‘‘other powers that try to defeat the sovereignty and free will of the combative peoples of the world.’’98
Hezbollah Influence Bad – Laundry List
Impact laundry list—terrorism, human trafficking, and drug trade
Poe, Texas Representative, chair of the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, 13
(Ted. "HEZBOLLAH’S STRATEGIC SHIFT: A GLOBAL TERRORIST THREAT." 113th Congress. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Congress, Washington DC. 20 May 2013. Address. JMR)
As I stated before another Congressional subcommittee nearly two years ago, the
"Hezbollah” Iranian presence in Latin America constitutes a clear threat to the security of the U.S. homeland .... In addition to operational terrorist activity, Hezbollah also is immersed in criminal activity throughout the region- from trafficking in weapons, drugs, and persons .... If our government and responsible partners in Latin America fail to act, I believe there will be an attack on U.S. personnel, installations or interests in the Americas ... " as a result of this dangerous conspiracy. The narcoterrorism on our doorstep, perpetrated by Hezbollah with Iranian and Venezuelan support, demands a response from those whose job it is to keep us safe. Our government must take effective measures-unilaterally and with willing partners-to disrupt and dismantle illicit operations and neutralize unacceptable threats.
Narco-Terrorism Rise Now – Latin America
Narco-terrorism is on the upswing – drug trafficking is funding groups like Hezbollah and Al Qaeda
Neumann, Senior Fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, 11
(Vanessa, 12/2011, Foreign Policy Research Institute, “The New Nexus of Narcoterrorism: Hezbollah and Venezuela,” http://www.fpri.org/enotes/2011/201112.neumann.narcoterrorism.html, accessed 7/9/13, IC)
Press stories, as well as a television documentary, over the past two months have detailed the growing cooperation between South American drug traffickers and Middle Eastern terrorists, proving that the United States continues to ignore the mounting terrorist threat in its own “backyard” of Latin America at its own peril. A greater portion of financing for Middle Eastern terrorist groups, including Hezbollah and Al Qaeda, is coming from Latin America, while they are also setting up training camps and recruiting centers throughout our continent, endangering American lives and interests globally. Some Latin American countries that were traditional allies for the U.S. (including Venezuela) have now forged significant political and economic alliances with regimes whose interests are at odds with those of the U.S., particularly China, Russia and Iran. In fact Iran and Iran’s Lebanese asset, “the Party of God,” Hezbollah, have now become the main terror sponsors in the region and are increasingly funded by South American cocaine.
Venezuela and Iran are strong allies: Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad publicly call each other “brothers,” and last year signed 11 memoranda of understanding for, among other initiatives, joint oil and gas exploration, as well as the construction of tanker ships and petrochemical plants. Chávez’s assistance to the Islamic Republic in circumventing U.N. sanctions has got the attention of the new Republican leadership of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, resulting in the May 23rd, 2011 announcement by the US State Department that it was imposing sanctions on the Venezuelan government-owned oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) as a punishment for circumventing UN sanctions against Iran and assisting in the development of the Iran’s nuclear program.
Besides its sponsored terrorist groups, Iran also has a growing direct influence in Latin America, spurred by three principal motivations: 1) a quest for uranium, 2) a quest for gasoline, 3) a quest for a base of operations that is close to the US territory, in order to position itself to resist diplomatic and possible military pressure, possibly by setting up a missile base within striking distance of the mainland US, as the Soviets did in the Cuban Missile Crisis. FARC, Hezbollah and Al Qaeda all have training camps, recruiting bases and networks of mutual assistance in Venezuela as well as throughout the continent.
I have long argued that Latin America is an increasing source of funding for Middle Eastern terrorism and to overlook the political changes and security threats in the region with such geographic proximity to the US and its greatest source of immigrants is a huge strategic mistake. It was inevitable that South American cocaine traffickers and narcoterrorists would become of increasing importance to Hezbollah and other groups. While intelligence officials believe that Hezbollah used to receive as much as $200 million annually from its primary patron, Iran, and additional money from Syria, both these sources have largely dried up due to the onerous sanctions imposed on the former and the turmoil in the latter.
A recent New York Times front-page article (December 14, 2011) revealed the extensive and intricate connections between Hezbollah and South American cocaine trafficking. Far from being the passive beneficiaries of drug-trafficking expats and sympathizers, Hezbollah has high-level officials directly involved in the South American cocaine trade and its most violent cartels, including the Mexican gang Los Zetas. The “Party of God’s” increasing foothold in the cocaine trade is facilitated by an enormous Lebanese diaspora. As I wrote in my May 2011 e-note, in 2005, six million Muslims were estimated to inhabit Latin American cities. However, ungoverned areas, primarily in the Amazon regions of Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil, present easily exploitable terrain over which to move people and material. The Free Trade Zones of Iquique, Chile; Maicao, Colombia; and Colón, Panama, can generate undetected financial and logistical support for terrorist groups. Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru offer cocaine as a lucrative source of income. In addition, Cuba and Venezuela have cooperative agreements with Syria, Libya, and Iran.
Some shocking revelations into the global interconnectedness of Latin American governments and Middle Eastern terrorist groups have come from Walid Makled, Venezuela’s latter-day Pablo Escobar, who was arrested on August 19, 2010 in Cúcuta, a town on the Venezuelan-Colombian border. A Venezuelan of Syrian descent known variously as “El Turco” (“The Turk”) or “El Arabe” (“The Arab”), he is allegedly responsible for smuggling 10 tons of cocaine a month into the US and Europe—a full 10 percent of the world’s supply and 60 percent of Europe’s supply. His massive infrastructure and distribution network make this entirely plausible, as well as entirely implausible the Venezuelan government did not know. Makled owned Venezuela’s biggest airline, Aeropostal, huge warehouses in Venezuela’s biggest port, Puerto Cabello, and bought enormous quantities of urea (used in cocaine processing) from a government-owned chemical company.
After his arrest and incarceration in the Colombian prison La Picota, Makled gave numerous interviews to various media outlets. When asked on camera by a Univisión television reporter whether he had any relation to the FARC, he answered: “That is what I would say to the American prosecutor.” Asked directly whether he knew of Hezbollah operations in Venezuela, he answered: "In Venezuela? Of course! That which I understand is that they work in Venezuela. [Hezbollah] make money and all of that money they send to the Middle East." A prime example of the importance of the Lebanese diaspora in triangulating amongst South American cocaine and Middle Eastern terrorists, is Ayman Joumaa, a Sunni Muslim of the Medellín cartel with deep ties with Shiites in the Hezbollah strongholds of southern Lebanon. His indictment made public on Tuesday “charges him with coordinating shipments of Colombian cocaine to Los Zetas in Mexico for sale in the United States, and laundering the proceeds” (NY Times, Dec. 14, 2011).
Narco-Terrorism Rise – Venezuela
Venezuela is facilitating Iranian-funded narco-terrorists – lifting visa requirements for Iranians means terrorists can easily access Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, and Panama
Shinkman, U.S. News & World Report national security reporter, 4/24
(Paul D., 4/24/13, U.S. News & World Report, “Iranian-Sponsored Narco-Terrorism in Venezuela: How Will Maduro Respond?” http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2013/04/24/iranian-sponsored-narco-terrorism-in-venezuela-how-will-maduro-respond?page=2, accessed 7/9/13, IC)
At a conference earlier this month, top U.S. military officers identified what they thought would be the top threats to the U.S. as it draws down from protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Gen. James Amos, commandant of the Marine Corps, was unequivocal about a largely unreported danger:
"Narco-terrorism just on our south border: [it is] yet to be seen just how that is going to play out in our own nation, but it is an issue and it is something that our nation is going to have to deal with."
"Colombia is doing particularly well, but there is an insurgency growing," Amos continued. "They have been fighting it, probably the greatest success story in this part of the world."
The commandant's remarks came a week before the April 14 election where Venezuelans chose a successor to the wildly popular and charismatic Hugo Chavez, who died March 5. Amos indicated the outcome of this election would define much of future relations between the U.S. and Venezuela, located on a continent that has rarely appeared on America's foreign policy radar in the last decade.
Experts, analysts and pundits could not have predicted the election outcome: The establishment's Nicolas Maduro beat reformer Henrique Capriles by a margin of roughly 1 percent. Chavez's hand-picked successor inherited the presidency, but he would not enjoy a broad public mandate to get a teetering Venezuela back on track.
The situation in the South American nation remains dire amid skyrocketing inflation, largely due to Chavez's efforts to nationalize private industry and increase social benefits.
Maduro's immediate attention after claiming victory was drawn to remedying widespread blackouts and food shortages.
One expert on the region says the new leader may need to tap into a shadow world of transnational crime to maintain the stability his countrymen expect.
"Venezuela is a really nice bar, and anybody can go in there and pick up anybody else," says Doug Farah, an expert on narco-terrorism and Latin American crime.
He compares the country to the kind of establishment where nefarious actors can find solutions to a problem. Anti-American groups can find freelance cyber terrorists, for example, or potential drug runners can make connections with the FARC, the Colombian guerilla organization, he says.
"Sometimes it creates a long-term relationship, and sometimes it creates a one-night stand," says Farah, a former Washington Post investigative reporter who is now a senior fellow at the Virginia-based International Assessment and Strategy Center.
Under Chavez, Venezuela also created strong ties with Cuba, which for decades has navigated treacherous financial waters and desperate economic straits, all while dodging U.S. influence. But the help Venezuela receives is not limited to its own hemisphere.
Farah produced a research paper for the U.S. Army War College in August 2012 about the "growing alliance" between state-sponsored Iranian agents and other anti-American groups in Latin America, including the governments of Venezuela and Cuba.
This alliance with Iran uses established drug trade routes from countries in South and Central America to penetrate North American borders, all under a banner of mutual malevolence toward the U.S.
The results of this access are largely secret, though security experts who spoke with U.S. News believe the attempted assassination of the Saudi Arabian ambassador in Washington, D.C.'s Georgetown neighborhood was carried out by Iranian intelligence operatives.
"Each of the Bolivarian states has lifted visa requirements for Iranian citizens, thereby erasing any public record of the Iranian citizens that come and go to these countries," wrote Farah of countries such as Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia and Panama.
He also cited Venezuelan Foreign Minister David Velasquez who said, while speaking at a press conference in Tehran in 2010, "We are confident that Iran can give a crushing response to the threats and sanctions imposed by the West and imperialism."
AT – Latin American Terrorism Impact
No terrorism in Latin America – Hezbollah hasn’t had an attack in over two decades
Weitz, Hudson Institute Senior Fellow and Director of the Center for Political-Military Analysis, 11
(Richard, 11/9/11, Project Syndicate, “Where are Latin America’s Terrorists,” http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/where-are-latin-america-s-terrorists-, accessed 7/9/13, IC)
WASHINGTON, DC – The Colombian army’s killing of Alfonso Cano, head of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), will not eliminate that country’s largest guerrilla group anytime soon. But it does partly illustrate why international terrorism has not established a major presence in Latin America. Local security forces, bolstered by generous American assistance, have made the region a difficult place for foreign terrorists to set up operational cells – and other conditions also help to make Latin America less vulnerable.
One reason why the FARC has survived repeated blows to its leadership is the support that it receives from various groups, perhaps including government officials, in neighboring Ecuador and Venezuela. Fortunately, this backing appears to have declined in the last year or so, following improvement in Colombia’s relations with these countries.
Another factor contributing to the FARC’s survival has been its transformation over the years from a revolutionary organization into a narco-terrorist group that uses violence to support its criminal operations. Many former terrorist and insurgent groups in the region have undergone similar transformations over the last two decades.
These groups, some with transnational reach, mostly engage in narcotics trafficking, arms smuggling, and kidnapping. At worst, they sometimes employ terrorist tactics (commonly defined as violence that deliberately targets civilians). In Colombia, the FARC and the National Liberation Army (ELN) finance their operations through drug trafficking, kidnapping, and extortion. These groups might kill civilians, but their main targets are the police and security personnel who threaten their activities.
Latin America is distinctive in the recurring and broad overlap of mass movements professing revolutionary goals with transnational criminal operations. The Internet and modern social media are allowing these mass criminal movements to expand their activities beyond kidnapping, extortion, and trafficking in drugs, arms, and people, to include fraud, piracy, information theft, hacking, and sabotage.
Violent mass movements remain in some Latin American countries, but, like the FARC, they are typically heavily engaged in organized crime. Drug cartels and gang warfare may ruin the lives of thousands of innocent people, but they should not be seen as equivalent to the ideological revolutionaries who used to wreak havoc in the region, or to contemporary mass terrorists.
Extra-regional terrorist movements such as al-Qaeda have minimal presence in South America, with little independent operational activity and few ties to local violent movements. At most, the two types of groups might share operational insights and revenue from transnational criminal operations. Hezbollah has not conducted an attack in Latin America in almost two decades. Indigenous organized criminal movements are responsible for the most serious sources of local violence.
Latin America is not a good environment for terrorists – no large Muslim communities and organized crime – their evidence is crying wolf, Latin American governments simply want US funding to combat “terrorism”
Weitz, Hudson Institute Senior Fellow and Director of the Center for Political-Military Analysis, 11
(Richard, 11/9/11, Project Syndicate, “Where are Latin America’s Terrorists,” http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/where-are-latin-america-s-terrorists-, accessed 7/9/13, IC)
Latin American countries generally are not a conducive environment for major terrorist groups. They lack large Muslim communities that could provide a bridgehead for Islamist extremist movements based in Africa and the Middle East. The demise of military dictatorships and the spread of democratic regimes throughout Latin America (except for Cuba) means that even severe economic, class, ethnic, and other tensions now more often manifest themselves politically, in struggles for votes and influence.
No Latin American government appears to remain an active state sponsor of foreign terrorist movements. At worst, certain public officials may tolerate some foreign terrorists’ activities and neglect to act vigorously against them. More often, governments misapply anti-terrorist laws against their non-violent opponents. For example, despite significant improvement in its human-rights policies, the Chilean government has at times applied harsh anti-terrorism laws against indigenous Mapuche protesters.
Indeed, Latin American terrorism is sometimes exaggerated, because governments have incentives to cite local terrorist threats to secure foreign support, such as US capacity-building funding. Just as during the Cold War, when Latin American leaders were lavished with aid for fighting communist subversion, governments seek to fight “terrorist” threats at America’s expense.
Ironically, the strength of transnational criminal organizations in Latin America may act as a barrier to external terrorist groups. Extra-regional terrorists certainly have incentives to penetrate the region. Entering the US, a high-value target for some violent extremist groups, from Latin America is not difficult for skilled operatives. Extra-regional terrorist groups could also raise funds and collaborate operationally with local militants.
But Latin America’s powerful transnational criminal movements, such as the gangs in Mexico that control much of the drug trafficking into the US, do not want to jeopardize their profits by associating themselves with al-Qaeda and its affiliates. Supporting terrorism would merely divert time and other resources from profit-making activities, while focusing unsought US and other international attention on their criminal operations.
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