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Unseen
Islamic State Financial Accounts for Deir az-Zor Province
by Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi
Jihadology
October 5, 2015
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Unlike
other jihadist groups, Islamic State is not dependent on foreign
donors.
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The question of where the Islamic State [IS] acquires its funding has
been a subject of much discussion. Though ideological partisans often see
a private Gulf Arab funding hand behind IS, the general consensus now
seems to accept that IS is not dependent on foreign donors in any
meaningful way, and thus largely acquires its revenues from resources
within the territories it operates, including taxation, sales of oil and
gas, antiquities and the like. Thus, the majority of the debate now
focuses on trying to determine the relative importance of each of these
sources of revenue.
A number of analyses have been produced relying on local sources
within Iraq and Syria, and in this regard I highly recommend Die Zeit's
investigation from December 2014, the fruit of a team of researchers
including my colleague Yassin Musharbash.
However, a deficiency in all the work thus far on IS finances is a
lack of statistics from IS itself on income and expenditures, and so a
degree of guesswork in estimating has always been involved. The exclusive
documents that will be presented below- obtained from IS' Diwan Bayt
al-Mal (financial ministry) in eastern Syria's Deir az-Zor province
(Wilayat al-Kheir)- provide a remedy in giving a first time view of IS
budgets by its own account for the month of Rabi' al-Awal 1436 AH (c. 23
December 2014-22 January 2015).
For context, Deir az-Zor province has been almost entirely under the
control of IS since July 2014, while a regime presence still holds out in
parts of Deir az-Zor city and at a military airport. In defeating the
rebels in Deir az-Zor province, IS has gained a monopoly on oil and gas
resources in the province. The province's long-standing importance to the
oil and gas sector of the Syrian economy is well-known, and it
undoubtedly constitutes the largest pool of oil and gas resources in
Syria that IS has been able to exploit.
As part of its narrative of 'breaking the borders' between Syria and
Iraq, IS created a 'Euphrates
Province' that spans eastern Deir az-Zor province and western Anbar
province, including the districts of Albukamal in Syria and al-Qa'im,
Rawa and Anah in Iraq.
Figures in the documents help us to quantify IS financing. From IS'
richest province in fossil fuels, revenues and expenditures for the
province come in the form of millions of dollars on a monthly basis, not
tens or hundreds of millions. Further, despite the significant holdings
of oil and gas resources, these sources of revenue by no means constitute
the majority of IS' income in the province. Statistically, revenue
streams for the province can be divided as follows using the data from
the documents:
Source
|
Percentage
of Revenue
|
Oil
& Gas
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27.7%
|
Electricity
|
3.9%
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Taxes
|
23.7%
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Confiscations
|
44.7%
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As can be seen, a plurality of the income actually comes from
confiscations of property and money. This may take place for a number of
reasons: e.g. residents who fled their homes, violations of IS
regulations and illicit smuggling of goods, particularly forbidden items
like cigarettes and alcohol. Movement across border areas is important in
this regard when combined also with transit fees for legitimate travel
and transportation of goods.
Meanwhile, IS' expenditures primarily go towards military upkeep in
the form of expenditures for bases and paying fighters' salaries.
Conspicuously absent from the expenditures are accounts for salaries of
workers officially under the authority of the Diwan al-Ta'aleem
(education). The
reason for this is that the IS process of revamping the education
system in accordance with its ideology required the closing of many
schools in this period to subject teachers and staff to 'repentance' and
Shari'a lessons, while the regime continued to pay salaries though under
strict conditions for the recipients to come in person to the relevant
places stipulated by the regime. Note that the Islamic Police comes under
the Diwan al-Hisba working closely with IS' judiciary department (Diwan
al-Qada wa al-Mazalim), and both these diwans play key roles in confiscations
of goods and property.
Here is the breakdown of expenditures by percentage.
Expenditure
|
Percentage
of Expenditure
|
Expenditures
for bases
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19.8%
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Fighters'
salaries
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43.6%
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Media
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2.8%
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Islamic
Police
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10.4%
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Diwan
al-Khidamat (Services Department)
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17.7%
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Diwan
Bayt al-Mal: aid sums
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5.7%
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Some more points of analysis to consider:
– Popular conceptions of IS income need to have a more sober and
realistic perspective on the role oil and gas revenues. Daily revenues
from the oil wells here (total divided by 30) yield on average $66,433.
If this is the average revenue from IS' best oil holdings in Syria and
one engages in reasonable extrapolation, then one will come nowhere near
the total figure of $3
million a day for IS in oil sales that was
widely touted in the media in summer 2014, even when making
allowances for subsequent damage to infrastructure from coalition
airstrikes. A sounder estimate would put such income at no more than
5-10% of that figure.
– On a related historical note, one should dismiss accounts that
portray IS' predecessors as being suddenly
enriched from eastern Syrian oilfields and antiquities beginning in late
2012, based on hearsay about alleged computer flash sticks revealing
IS finances and off-base regarding the dynamics of control of eastern
Syrian oil over the course of the Syrian civil war (pace the Guardian
report, IS' predecessor ISIS did not exist in late 2012, let alone
'commandeer' eastern Syrian oilfields).
– The sale of antiquities under the authority of the antiquities
subdivision of the Diwan
al-Rikaz is not explicitly mentioned in the accounts here, but it is
most likely included within taxation as part of the IS bureaucratic
structure. Documents
captured from the Abu Sayyaf raid by U.S. forces appear to show a 20%
tax to be paid on antiquities sold in Deir az-Zor province. Two of the
individual transactions presented from December 2014 illustrate tax
payments of more than $10,000, while the third constitutes a little over
$1000.
– Despite IS' propaganda on 'breaking the borders' and the creation of
'Euphrates Province', the inclusion of Albukamal within Deir az-Zor
province financial data and transactions is an example of how IS still
deals in prior administrative boundaries. Compare with a
previous July 2015 document I published fromWilayat al-Kheir's
Diwan al-Khidamat ordering for an Abu Dujana al-Libi to be paid $100,000
for a road project between Albukamal and al-Qa'im. Other
administrative documents from 'Euphrates Province' indicate that IS
administration rarely seems to deal with the territory as a united
entity, but rather by its Syrian and Iraqi halves. This is so even as
travel within 'Euphrates Province' is relatively easy, as a friend of
mine from Rawa now works in Albukamal, and residents on both sides of the
Iraq-Syria border regularly cross both ways for business, market shopping
etc.
– Ultimately, the most vital IS revenues depend on the continued
existence of its bureaucratic structure within the territories it
controls, and there is little one can do to disrupt that short of
destroying that structure militarily. The suggested siege-like strategy
to trigger a collapse from within is impossible to realize in the current
circumstances, as one cannot wholly isolate IS territory from
interactions with the outside world, and so cash flows will continue. The
Iraqi government's decision to cut off direct salary payments to workers
in IS-held areas will certainly help reduce IS taxation revenues, but it
was not the sole avenue for cash flow, and though hardships for residents
will increase, IS' rigid security apparatus is still highly capable of
suppressing major revolt.
Below are the documents with translation. Note that
"Tajammu'at" refer to Deir
az-Zor area residential districts.
Islamic State
Wilayat al-Kheir
Diwan Bayt al-Mal
Bayt al-Mal Administration
15 Rabi' al-Thani 1436 AH
5 February 2015
Rough draft of the operation of the management of wealth project.
Bayt al-Mal in Wilayat al-Kheir
Copy to the Diwan al-Wilaya [governor's office]
Copy to the Diwan al-Hisba [checks for potential irregularities in the
records etc.]
Uncirculated
In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful
Table of accounts for Wilayat al-Kheir for the month of Rabi'
al-Awal of the year 1436 AH
Table for income to the treasury of Wilayat al-Kheir.
Wilayat
al-Kheir
|
Albukamal
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Al-Mayadeen
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Al-Badiya
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Borders
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Oil
wells
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$820,000
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$513,000
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$630,000
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$30,000
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Gas
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$12,000
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$330,000
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Electricity
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$53,000
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$68,000
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$13,000
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$9,000
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$188,000
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Taxes
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$611,000
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$313,000
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$297,000
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$577,000
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$200,000
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Confiscations
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$33,000
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$17,000
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$280,000
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$2,700,000
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$744,000
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Total accounting of income for the treasury of the Wilaya for the
month of Rabi' al-Awal of the year 1436 AH from the centre of Wilayat
al-Kheir, Albukamal, al-Mayadeen, al-Badiya and the border centres for
the Wilaya is $8,438,000.
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Table of confiscations for the month of Rabi' al-Awal of the year
1436 AH:
Wilayat
al-Kheir
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Albukamal
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Al-Mayadeen
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Al-Badiya
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Borders
|
Tajammu'at
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House
|
|
|
6
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17
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56
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Car
|
3
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2
|
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80
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11
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Truck
|
1
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11
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36
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Material
sums
|
$2000
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$1300
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$13,000
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$480,000
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Land (in dunams)
|
|
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180
dunams
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20
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Forbidden
items
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Cigarettes:
3000 packs
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100
cases of cigarettes
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1200
cases of cigarettes
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Livestock
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93
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600
head of sheep
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1320
head of sheep, 50 cows
|
|
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In what follows is a table of expenditures for Wilayat al-Kheir for
the month of Rabi' al-Awal of the year 1436 AH:
Expenditure
for the bases: "Provision of food" etc. in the centre of
the wilaya
|
$262,000
|
Expenditure
for the bases: "Provision of food" etc. in al-Mayadeen
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$130,000
|
Expenditure
for the bases: "Provision of food" etc. in Albukamal
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$98,000
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Expenditure
for the bases: "Provision of food" etc. in the Badiya
|
$512,000
|
Expenditure
for the bases: "Provision of food" etc.: airport
|
$104,000
|
Mujahid
allowance [monthly salaries for fighters] from the city centre
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$600,000
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Mujahid
allowance from al-Mayadeen and Albukamal
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$480,000
|
Mujahid
allowance from the Badiya
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$1,360,000
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Media
centre
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$155,000
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Islamic
Police centres
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$580,000
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Diwan
al-Khidamat for the centre and countryside of the wilaya
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$988,000
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Diwan
Bayt al-Mal: aid sums
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$318,000
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Total
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$5,587,000
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Zakat taxes in Wilayat al-Kheir for the month of Rabi' al-Awal of
the year 1436 AH:
Zakat on wheat:
. $300,000 distributed upon [i.e. imposed as zakat taxation on] the
cultivated lands in 'wheat' in Wilayat al-Kheir, without taking into
account the kusur of the zakat [zakat that could not be paid]* for the
year 1435 AH, and accounting of zakat will be accomplished in the month
of Rabi' al-Awal every year.
Zakat on barley:
. $170,000 distributed upon the cultivated land in 'barley' in
Wilayat al-Kheir, without taking into account the kusur of the zakat
for the year 1435 AH, and accounting of zakat will be accomplished in
the month of Rabi' al-Awal every year.
Zakat on wealth:
. $1,200,000 of zakat on wealth in Wilayat al-Kheir.
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Zakat on camels:
. $206,000 from zakat on "camels" in Wilayat al-Kheir taking
into account the kusur of the zakat* for the year 1435 AH.
Zakat on fruits:
. $100,000 distributed upon the cultivated fields and the fruits of
the trees in Wilayat al-Kheir without taking into account the kusur of
the zakat for the year 1435 AH, and accounting of zakat will be
accomplished in the month of Rabi' al-Awal every year.
*[Note: My friend Rashad Ali further clarifies that the kusur
of zakat is that which is not obliged/charged for zakat taxation, as it
falls below minimum threshold for mandatory zakat taxation].
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi is a research
fellow at Middle East Forum's Jihad
Intel project.
Update 15 October 2015: my friend from Rawa further explains
that his work in the realm of Internet involves back and forth between
Rawa and Albukamal, going up to the latter town on a weekly basis.
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