TY - BOOK AU - Bahney,Benjamin W. AU - Shatz,Howard J. AU - Ganier,Carroll AU - Mcpherson,Renny AU - Sude,Barbara AU - Elson,Sara Beth AU - Schbley,Ghassan ED - National Defense Research Institute (U.S.). ED - Rand Corporation. ED - United States. TI - An economic analysis of the financial records of al-Qa'ida in Iraq SN - 0833050397 (pbk. : alk. paper) AV - HV6433.I722 Q357 2010 PY - 2010/// CY - Santa Monica, CA PB - RAND KW - Qaida (Organization) KW - Finance KW - Terrorism KW - Iraq N1 - "RAND National Defense Research Institute."; "This research was conducted within the Intelligence Policy Center of the RAND National Defense Research Institute"--Preface; Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-92); Introduction -- AQI and the Political and Economic Environment in Anbar Province -- Auditing al-Qa'ida in Iraq -- The Economics of AQI's Compensation -- The Flow of Expenditures and the Pace of Attacks -- Implications -- Appendix A: Anbar Province -- Appendix B: Time Line of Events in Anbar Province; Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format N2 - This monograph analyzes the finances of the militant group al-Qa'ida in Iraq (AQI) in Anbar province during 2005 and 2006, at the peak of the group's power and influence. The authors draw on captured documents that give details on the daily financial transactions of one specific sector within Anbar province and of the financial transactions of the AQI provincial administration. Some of their conclusions are: AQI was a hierarchical organization with decentralized decisionmaking; AQI in Anbar was profitable enough to send substantial revenues out of the province in 2006; AQI relied on extortion, theft, and black market sales to fund its operations in Anbar; AQI needed large, regular revenue sources to fund its operations, but its administrative leaders did not hold much cash on hand. The authors' interpretation of data on compensation practices and participants' risk of death indicates that AQI members were poorly compensated and suggests that they were not motivated primarily by money to join the group. The authors also find that mounting attacks required organizational expenditures well beyond the cost of materiel used in attacks. One major conclusion is that disrupting AQI's financial flows could disrupt the pace of their attacks UR - http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/MG1026.html ER -