Three pro-Palestine terrorist groups — including Hamas, the organization behind the surprise attacks that killed more than 250 Israelis on Saturday — have been funding their operations with tens of thousands and thousands of dollars raised through cryptocurrency.
Between August 2021 and June 2023, Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jahid (PIJ), and its Lebanese ally, Hezbollah, have collectively received over $134 million in crypto, in response to Israeli government seizure orders and blockchain analytics reports reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Hamas received some $41 million in digital currency over the nearly two-year period, The Journal reported. PIJ — whose militants from the Gaza Strip joined Hamas in storming Israel over the weekend — has received crypto funds to the tune of $93 million between August 2021 and this June, in response to the outlet.
Crypto funds were seized from crypto exchange Binance in June reportedly belonging to Hezbollah, a longtime foe of Israel based in Lebanon, though it’s unclear how much digital currency the group had.
A Binance spokesperson told The Journal that the Singapore-based company “has been working in real-time, across the clock, to support ongoing efforts” to maintain terrorist groups from getting access to crypto.
It wasn’t immediately clear whether the funding was used to finance Hamas’ recent airstrikes and raids which have obliterated Israeli cities and left residents defenseless.
Researchers who study Hamas’ funding, nonetheless, told The Journal that crypto stays a top resource the group uses to generate funds, including bringing in money from Gaza and Egypt.
The US has said that Hamas — which governs Gaza — is heavily subsidized by Iran, with funding from the nation’s capital, Tehran, coming in at around $100 million per 12 months.
Hamas’ military wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, has asked supporters on its Telegram channel to donate bitcoin from as early as 2019, which it transferred into the organization’s accounts via Binance, in response to The Journal.
Representatives from Binance didn’t immediately reply to The Post’s request for comment.
“The fact of jihad is the expenditure of effort and energy, and money is the backbone of war,” the group wrote in a 2019 post with a crypto wallet that received about $30,000 in bitcoin that 12 months, The Journal reported.
In April, Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades’ account shared a post thanking individuals who donated bitcoin to “support the Palestinian resistance,” but said the group would not be taking financial gifts in the shape of digital currency, citing “concern for the security of donors.”
The group also cited a “doubling of hostile efforts against everyone who tries to support the resistance through this currency.”
In keeping with The Journal, Hamas has received donations through payment processors that generate addresses in an effort to hide its true crypto wallet. Links to those processors are reportedly embedded in the al-Qassam Brigades’ fundraising web sites.
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Cryptocurrency allows users to bypass the normal banking system by immediately transferring tokens to a digital wallet via decentralized blockchains, meaning there’s no single person or group that has control over the transaction.
The US Treasury Department has said that there are gaps in financial crime controls at crypto exchanges that allow terrorist groups including Hamas, Islamic State, and al Qaeda to misuse them, in response to The Journal.
After the Israeli government led an operation to seize crypto belonging to Hezbollah earlier this 12 months, Israeli Defense Minster Yoav Gallant said using digital currencies was making the job of eliminating terrorist organizations much more difficult, the organization reported.
“This isn’t a simple task,” Gallant said of prohibiting these groups from crypto exchanges.
The Israeli government also said this week that it’s working to freeze Hamas’ crypto accounts that they use for donations solicited on social networks in an effort to locate the “financial infrastructure in cryptocurrencies utilized by terror entities to fund their activities,” per The Journal.
The Post has sought comment from the US Treasury Department.