Tri-Border Countries Enter
into Alliance Against Terrorism
Argentina Designates Hezbollah as
Terrorist Organization
(New York, N.Y.) - On July 22, Argentina,
Brazil,
and Paraguay
entered
into an alliance with the United States to counter “illicit
activity” and terrorism in the Tri-Border Area (TBA), the region that
straddles the three South American countries’ borders. The “three plus
one” alliance, which targets Hezbollah and Iran specifically, was made
at the Buenos Aires Summit with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
The announcement follows Argentina’s decision to formally designate
Hezbollah as a terrorist organization, which coincided with the
25-year anniversary of the bombing of the Argentine Israelite Mutual
Association (AMIA) headquarters in Buenos Aires. Both Hezbollah and
its financial sponsor Iran are blamed.
Argentina has a history of Islamic terrorism. Numerous groups,
including Hezbollah, Hamas, and al-Qaeda, operate in the TBA and have
fundraised and plotted attacks from the region, including two
Hezbollah-linked attacks on Jewish targets in Buenos Aires: the 1992
bombing of the Embassy of Israel that killed 29 people, and the 1994
bombing of the AMIA headquarters that killed 85 people—Argentina’s
deadliest terrorist attack to date.
Last year, CEP released a report titled The
Many Criminal Heads of the Golden Hydra. It found that the TBA has
grown into a mini-state that benefits a corrupt elite. The area has
become the center of a number of illegal activities like money
laundering and cigarette smuggling that benefit Hezbollah—to the tune
of up to $800 million a week or $43 billion a year. The TBA presents a
significant challenge for national authorities of all three countries.
The International Monetary Fund has expressed particular concern about
the effect the money laundering and terrorist financing in the region
will have on the effective functioning of legitimate capital flows
around the world.
To read the CEP report, The Many Criminal Heads of the Golden
Hydra, please click here.
To read the CEP report, Argentina: Extremism and Counter-Extremism,
please click here.
To read the CEP report, Brazil: Extremism and Counter-Extremism,
please click here.
To read the CEP report, Paraguay: Extremism and Counter-Extremism,
please click here.
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