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Friday, January 12, 2007
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Manning a forgotten front in the war on terrorism
by Rebecca Hagelin
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Conservatives are often accused of being anti-government. It’s an unfair rap -- coming, ironically, from liberals whose blind faith in government causes plenty of social ills -- but the myth persists. In fact, conservatives favor a limited government that carries out its express duties (and no more) as efficiently and effectively as possible. And yes, you can find examples of government performing well -- and contributing to the general welfare.

Consider the case of John Taylor. His work as the head of the Treasury Department’s international finance division might not sound like it would make interesting reading. Yet his new book, Global Financial Warriors -- which details his strenuous efforts to help fight the War on Terrorism on the financial front -- proves otherwise. And with the major media serving almost nothing but round-the-clock pessimism, it’s refreshing to read a success story for a change.

It’s easy to overlook the financial aspect of the war -- after all, it doesn’t offer anything as snappy as battlefield footage and frontline reporting. But as President Bush pointed out shortly after 9/11: “The War on Terrorism will be fought on a variety of fronts … The front lines will look different from the wars of the past … It is a war that will require the United States to use our influence in a variety of areas in order to win it. And one area is financial.”The reason is obvious: Terrorists can’t operate without funds. Taylor’s task in the days that followed 9/11 was to freeze terrorist assets and to track them. In short, while our troops hit the terrorists hard in the front, Taylor’s team of “financial warriors” would hit them in the rear -- specifically, in the wallet, hampering their ability to fight back.

That sounds relatively simple on paper, but in practice, it’s another story. Take “hawalas.” A hawala, Taylor notes, is a place (say, a storefront) that provides what are essentially paperless transactions -- which are practically impossible to trace. “Suppose a Pakistani cab driver in San Francisco wants to send $1,000 to his mother, who lives in Karachi,” he writes. “The cab driver gives the money to the person working at the hawala. The hawala calls or e-mails a contact in Karachi, tells the contact to deliver the $1,000 to the cab driver’s mother, and the money is delivered within hours.”

Taylor’s solution: Compel all hawalas to register with the United States. The resulting spotlight did much to scare away terrorist transactions.

Much more had to be done, of course. Taylor had to plan the financial reconstruction of Afghanistan, for one thing. He also had to oversee the creation of a new Iraqi central bank and a new currency -- a huge printing effort that required the shipment of enough currency to fill 27 747s. Other tasks included reforming the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund and keeping Argentina’s debt default from sending the global economy into a tailspin.

To hear a capable and intelligent leader such as John Taylor tell it, though, it’s all in a day’s work. And maybe, for him, it was. His team, as he reminds us, was highly motivated: A poster that hung in the Treasury Department’s north lobby shows the famous image of Uncle Sam pointing and says: “We’re at war. Are YOU doing all you can?”

Global Financial Warriors also shows, contrary to liberal myth, just how engaged President Bush has been throughout this war. Taylor, who attended hundreds of meetings in the White House Situation Room, writes:

“I was never at an NSC meeting where President Bush did not run it in an intelligent, businesslike way, starting and ending on time, encouraging discussion, keeping people at ease, using humor when appropriate, listening carefully, asking penetrating questions, getting to the heart of the matter, making the decisions, and giving the commands.”

There’s a good reason that Taylor’s efforts met with success -- a reason that offers a way to improve government at all levels and in all departments: Taylor (like his boss, President Bush) demanded accountability. “What gets measured gets done,” he notes. This doesn’t mean micro-managing; indeed, he writes, “I always advocated a management philosophy in which people should tell their subordinates what needs to be done and not how to do it.”

As John Taylor put it as he launched his book tour at The Heritage Foundation, “We need a cadre of financial warriors.” And, I would add, a man of Taylor’s caliber to lead them. Then we’ll truly be doing “all we can” to win the war -- and spread the benefits and blessings of liberty far and wide.

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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I am not sure they are winning...
From North Korean printing presses to all the money leaching out of the country (notice any of the advertisements for international money orders lately?), I still think they have a long LONG way to go.

We have two levels of foreign debt - the actual foreign debt and then all of the dollars that were sent home by illegal aliens and then become foreign debt as well.

The consequences of this - well, there have got to be some, sometime....

An Unusually Informative Column!
Thank you for this, Miss Hagelin. Most Americans never get a peek at the less-publicized battles in the War on Terror, whether ongoing or concluded.

I find it interesting that liberals shout their loudest condemnations of precisely those organs of government which: 1) are authorized, explicitly or implicitly, by the Constitution, and 2) efficiently perform the duties for which they were intended. They reserve their praises for those institutions that: 1) have no Constitutional foundation whatsoever, or 2) have been perverted, temporarily at least, away from their intended function.

There's a moral in there, somewhere.

um...I think you missed something
The reason planes fly into banks is because of the way the economic system is structured. Colonists revolted against the Custom House in Boston for the same reason.

We are repeating history because we are too dumb to learn history. The Left and the Right are as blind as one another.

As Christ said many years ago: The love of money is the root of all evil.

Gold is just colored dirt, yet we had the '49 Gold Rush so people could go sit in the dirts looking for it. Then they took that colored dirt, locked it into a room, put a flag on the building, and have been guarding dirt ever since at Fort Knox. This is, of course, not a uniquely American absurdity. Pirates took to the sea to steal gold. Kings conquered the world in search of gold. But the essential problem remains: Love of money.

And secondarily, the use of money as a commodity.

We could have peace tomorrow if we were not a nation of morons, but everyone is addicted to the Stock Market (left and right) and the desire to make 2+2=5.

Franklin's creation of paper currency has created many more problems than what it solved. Instead of being insane about colored dirt, now we are insane about colored paper and electronic digits.

http://www.behappyandfree.com

Steve's missing something
How often do you come out of your clock? Hourly or every fifteen minutes?

Steve,
The love of money is the root of all evil?

The existence of a dollar bill implies the existence of productive human beings that are willing to trade their best effort for yours.

When you condemn money, you are condemning those who are productive. And, since you are using the goods (e.g. the computer that you used to type your confession) created by such humans while condemning them, you are confessing your own parasitic nature.

Just try to live for a few days without a productive person to support you.

S'long Slug!
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