Even US officials are aware that they could just end up wasting missiles if they hit Afghanistan, and risking the ire of many Muslims if they try to take out the Taliban. The ones wholl do the fighting on the ground here will be Afghanistans opposition Northern Alliance, with fresh support from the US-led coalition against terrorism.
What the Americans are doing is rushing to beef up their intelligence-gathering capability, greatly emasculated since the end of the cold war. These days some degree of paranoia is again considered healthy. The spooks have been sent back to their battle stations. The war they will wage, which is bound to turn dirty, we wont see on the news channels.
Osama bin Laden has learned to use the global capitalist system to finance his extensive operations and achieve his twisted objectives. His financial savvy, surely passed on to some of his lieutenants, makes it all the more urgent for the international community to fight money laundering.
The attacks in the US must have prompted our legislators to finally move their butts and pass a law against money laundering. Or maybe they were just worried about a backlash from the relatives of millions of overseas Filipino workers who may not get remittances on time.
Yesterday the two chambers of Congress passed their versions of a law to fight money laundering. Today the two versions will be reconciled, and the final product will be sent to Malacañang for President Arroyos signature before the Sept. 30 deadline set by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force.
Congressmen have already pointed out loopholes in their bill that money launderers can exploit. And like any law in this country, well have to see how the final product will be enforced.
I dont know if the bills passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives follow most of the 40 recommendations. But if its any consolation to those warning that we should not rush the passage of the anti-money laundering law, the same concerns now being raised here were also raised when the Americans started crafting their own laws to fight money laundering.
In the US State Departments 2001 report on money laundering and financial crimes, over 175 countries and jurisdictions were classified into three groups: those "of primary concern" for money laundering activities, those "of concern" and those "monitored."
Those in the third category, under monitoring, are not necessarily the toughest on money laundering, but simply those with underdeveloped financial systems such as Afghanistan, Laos and Nepal.
Among the 52 in the first category, of primary concern, are not only those on the FATFs original blacklist such as the Cayman Islands, Liechtenstein and the Philippines, but also squeaky-clean Singapore, Switzerland and the Group of 8 including the United States.
All financial systems are vulnerable. But with a law, at least we might be able to stay one step ahead of the money launderers.