This coming Saturday is the 20th anniversary of the attacks upon America on September 11, 2001. Like most Americans, this was the seminal event in the history of our country. I have been thinking a lot about that date and the anniversary; even more so with the fall of Afghanistan and the evacuation from Kabul. I wanted to do something to commemorate this anniversary, so I decided to do a podcast series featuring the personal stories of persons in the compliance field with their thoughts about what the date of 9/11 means to them, how it changed our profession and their thoughts looking back some 20 years later. The lineup for this week is:
- 6 – Gabe Hidalgo
- 7 – Juan Zarate
- 8 – Alex Dill
- 9 – Eric Feldman
- 10 – Scott Moritz
- 11 – John Lee Dumas
Juan Zarate is the Global Co-Managing Partner and Chief Strategy Officer at K2 integrity. On 9/11 he was at the Treasury Department working on international enforcement issues, anti-money laundering (AML), anti-corruption and anti-terrorist financing. Zarate discussed how his role changed, the Treasury Department response and what the tragic event means for him.
On 9/11, Zarate was in his office, which faced south giving him a view right to the Pentagon. Zarate had a TV in his office, obviously watching with horror as to what was happening in New York. He had been a terrorism prosecutor for a number of years at the Department of Justice (DOJ) so was aware of Al Qaeda. “When I looked south across the windows from the office you could see smoke billowing from the Pentagon. From the fourth floor of the Treasury Department, looking out across the river, you could see smoke rising from the Pentagon.” This affected him emotionally; something very different was happening, he recalled; the country was under attack.
Zarate said there were three categories of changes in fighting terrorism after 9/11. They were at the strategic level, departmental level and then the tactical level. He said, “What happened at that point was the government decided that the president decided very clearly we’re now at war. We can’t sit back. We can’t follow these cases after the fact, right? We are not here to just prosecute people. We now have to prevent these attacks from happening” through more proactive measures. “The attitude and the strategic direction of the government was [that] we now have to prevent terrorist attacks,” he recalled. “We have to disrupt and dismantle terrorist networks. And that led to an entire preventative paradigm for the counter-terrorism approach to the government.”
At the departmental level, the new mission of the Treasury Department was, “How do you use financial information more aggressively? How do we think about the use of tools and authorities that the Treasury has, like sanctions, anti-money laundering rules? How do we think about the relationships internationally with central banks, finance ministries? How do we get the world on board to disrupt terrorist financing, to rip these organizations out of the legitimate financial commercial world?”
At the tactical level, there was the passage of the Patriot Act, which broadened and deepened the AML system, and then enabling the international community. There was the creation of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which “created new standards for combating terrorist financing, things like dealing with cash couriers and other elements of the financial system, where we needed to make sure that the international community and in particular, the banks and the banking centers were doing everything possible to prevent terrorists from getting into the system.” This was a “wholesale shift that happened over time, but it was pretty quickly as there was a clear mandate from the President to prevent another attack and to do everything, to disrupt and dismantle terrorist networks.”
There were other areas in this tactical level. Zarate discussed the Executive Orders that came out, the list of terrorists, terrorist organizations, organizations supporting terrorism that came from the US. There were regulations specifying Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) regulations which came from OFAC and later FinCEN. Zarate said the ATF had a role as well as Federal Air Marshalls. He concluded, “there was an entire range of things, we were doing tactically and legally to try to amplify what we were doing from a US government and a Treasury perspective.”
I asked Juan, “What are your reflections now as we come up on the 20th anniversary of the day of 9/11, and really what it meant for America and for you 20 years later?” He responded that he has mixed emotions. He thinks about the victims and their families first of all. That day changed history. “It changed the way that the US government viewed the world. It changed the way that we operated our strategy. And it changed the sense of our vulnerability.” The recent events in Afghanistan make the 20th anniversary even more difficult for Juan. “I have very mixed emotions coming on the 20th anniversary of 9/11,” he concluded, “but I’m very proud of the work that we did. I’m proud of the people I served with, and my sympathies go out to the victims and their families.”
Join us tomorrow when Professor Alexander Dill reflects on being in Manhattan, in the financial district, on 9/11 and the changes brought by the Patriot Act.
Please check out each of the podcasts this week. They will post at 6 AM CT on the Compliance Podcast Network and JDSupra and midnight on Innovation in Compliance, YouTube, iTunes and Spotify.