International Journal on Criminology Volume 2, Number 1, Spring 2014 | Page 26

International Journal on Criminology Haqqani Network, PKK 9 , Hamas, Islamic Jihad, terrorist movements in Northern Ireland, Kosovo, or Chechen separatists to name a few, have been or are considered engaged in organized crime-type activities 10 . This crime-terror nexus does not limit itself to terrorism turning to organized crime but also concerns the adoption of terror tactics by criminals. The filming of executions, amputations, decapitations, and hangings by Mexican criminal groups corresponds to the well-known strategy of tension aiming to attract Mexico into the cycle of repression-vengeance, with the prospects of police blunders (extra-judicial killings), that would undermine the legitimacy of the state 11 . Violence is therefore political. The D-Company, a criminal organization first invested in smuggling activities (1970s), evolved into a fully fledged organized crime group also engaged in insurgency-terrorism through "supporting efforts to smuggle weapons to militant and terrorist groups". "By the 1990s, it began to conduct and participate in terrorist attacks, including the March 12, 1993, Bombay bombing" 12 . 5. In various countries and regions within them, crime and state seem to have, at least partially, merged, giving rise to a new type of organized crime entity, the criminal state. Every year, hundreds of billions of dollars are produced by illicit trades and are essentially laundered in the licit economy 13 , dozens of conflicts are fuelled by the smuggling of small arms and light weapons. Digital piracy (partially organized crime related), in less than a decade, transformed the movie and music industries and on average, 10,000 to 20,000 opioid users die each year from overdose, drug-related infectious diseases, violence, and other causes in the EU, Norway, and Turkey combined 14 . This influence on society, by all accounts, is found more lasting than any terrorist attacks. Of course, criminal groups rip the benefits from these illicit trades to finance necessary workforce and protection from lawful authorities (corruption), to the point of competing with states in both "monopol[ies] of the legitimate violence" (Weber) 15 and taxation (through extortion). Evolution of Transnational Organized Crime and National Security Implications This contributes to the burgeoning of so-called “failed states”, or more eloquently said, sovereigns without power, along major illicit trade routes. The global and local impacts of the illicit economy, from the Andean forest to French suburbs and North America through West Africa and 9 Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan/Kurdistan Workers' Party. 10 European Parliament, Europe's Crime-terror Nexus: Links between Terrorist and Organised Crime Groups in the European Union, 2012, 65 and CRS, Terrorism and Transnational Crime: Foreign Policy Issues for Congress, October 19, 2012, 40. 11 Mickaël R. Roudaut, In Narco Veritas?, Op. cit. 12 CRS, Terrorism and Transnational Crime, Op. cit. 13 According to the UNODC (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime), criminals, especially drug traffickers, may have laundered around US$1.6 trillion, or 2.7% of global GDP, in 2009. See Infra. 14 EMCDDA (European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction), European Drug Report 2013, May 2013, spec. p. 42. 15 For a case study, see Mickaël R. Roudaut, In Narco Veritas? Op. cit. 24