Washington needs to do something about the UAE’s dirty money
Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has triggered a literal
hunt by Global North nations for his and his cronies’ ill-gotten financial
assets. It has pushed USAID to announce a new global anti-corruption program
aimed at expanding the capacity of investigative journalists and civil society
to pursue reforms, and sift through big data dumps that are increasingly a
critical source of the financial flows and evidence both sanctions officials
and bank regulators need.
While all eyes are on #YachtWatch and the pursuit of Russian
oligarchs, there’s another major development with ramifications for Putin’s
corruption. On Friday, the Financial Action Task Force , an intergovernmental
anti-money laundering and illicit financing organization, added the United Arab Emirates to its money
laundering “gray list” — a major reputationational hit to the UAE as a
responsible partner.
Despite Emirati government officials fawning over the
country’s ongoing commitments to working with FATF, being placed on the “gray
list” flies in the face of Dubai’s projected image of a low-risk “business
friendly” environment — and the ratcheting up of international sanctions
against oligarchs, terrorists, and other crime bosses stationing their assets
in Dubai only creates more risk. Being added to the list also means increased
scrutiny and monitoring of its implementation of the actual policies the UAE
appears to have quickly stood up in response to eyebrow-raising revelations about
Dubai’s role as a central hub for blood money laundering, terror financing, and
offshoring ill-gotten gains.
This monitoring will be essential to determining whether
these commitments to FATF create meaningful steps toward ending Dubai’s role as
a major global tax haven, or if it will merely represent more window-dressing
to cover up systemic governance deficiencies essential to maintaining
autocratic rule. Jodi Vittori and Matthew T. Page, two anti-corruption and
security scholars at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace documented
how essential corruption is to the UAE’s overall political economy, that it is
“a feature, not a bug of Dubai’s political economy.”
Corruption, tax havens, money-laundering (in its many, many
forms), anonymous shell companies, and human trafficking all flow through the
Dubai, but it’s not like it (just like North Dakota, Switzerland, and Delaware)
is an “unknown” real estate tax haven or money laundering hub. Recall the
Emirates and other Gulf Cooperation Council countries’ (along with Western
banks’) reported 2009-12 assistance in laundering billions in wealth from the
Malaysian people through their respective sovereign wealth funds.
So what does this have to do with Russia? The UAE is one of
the few safe havens for Russian oligarchs and their wealth that remains. It’s
also no coincidence that the Emirati monarchy’s strategy (in lock step with
Saudi Arabia) remains having their cake and eating it too. The monarchy wants
to remain silent on Putin’s illegal invasion — after signing up, two years ago,
for billions in investment by the very companies the United States and its
transatlantic allies are (continuing) sanctioning, while also promising it is a
safe place to do business and the viable ally most of Washington has gaslighted
itself into believing it is. That’s why the FATF designation is so important:
it is one of the first times in recent memory that an international body has
placed credible pressure — and a semblance of potential financial
accountability — on the UAE to implement meaningful reforms, such as proof that
it is actually reforming the way it carries out investigations and prosecutions
among other required transparency measures.
The reality is that Dubai has only been “low risk” so long
as the Emirates have been able to keep up the farce that its allyship is worth
more than the benefits of accountability. Just as the addressing Putin and his
cronies’ corruption, and the power it inures, requires elites in the United
States to address their own corruption; undermining the influence of war
criminals, crime bosses, and oligarchs globally requires the United States to
hold any country it claims to be an “ally” accountable for enabling these
abusers no matter their nationality.
Thanks to Washington and the rest of Europe’s two-decades
long obsession with counterterrorism, however, accountability has been a scarce
concept in U.S. bilateral relationship with the Emirati monarchy no matter what
party controls the U.S. government. The refrain has often been that human
rights abuses, up to and including torture, must be downplayed in the name of
preserving intelligence-sharing, or ill-defined leverage that will never
actually be deployed.
Instead, the UAE has made it a practice to instill an image
of itself as “Little Sparta” within Washington, primarily by massive donations
to think tanks, political campaigns, and employing former U.S. military
officers, including a former Secretary of Defense James Mattis, as training
advisers. The real story, no matter the international image it projects, is one
of the UAE hiring former U.S. military members and members of the
genocide-committing Sudanese Janjaweed militia as paid mercenaries in Yemen. It
has waged numerous operations in Washington to influence both federal policy
and U.S. elections, and it has a critical counter revolutionary force acting to
(often violently) thwart people-powered movements for dignity and justice
throughout the region.
If Washington is serious about actually undermining the
ability of oligarchic elites to hold the world hostage, whether through nuclear
weapons, oil prices, or the offshoring of wealth that exacerbates unprecedented
levels of global inequality, it must get serious about not only cleaning up its
own side of the street, but any country it credibly claims as a critical
partner or ally. Otherwise, oligarchs and the autocratic strongmen who speak
for them will continue to reign in a shadow world of impunity that U.S. foreign
policy fuels, rather than counters.
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