U.S. Set To Crack Down on Terror Funds
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration announced a new tool yesterday aimed at putting a financial squeeze on people who run the networks that recruit and send would-be terrorists into Iraq.
President Bush unveiled a new executive order that allows the administration to block bank accounts and any other financial assets that might be found in this country belonging to people, companies or groups that the American government deems are working to threaten stability in Iraq.
Mr. Bush cited the “unusual and extraordinary threat” to national security and foreign policy of America “posed by acts of violence threatening the peace and stability of Iraq and undermining efforts to promote economic reconstruction and political reform in Iraq and to provide humanitarian assistance to the Iraqi people.”
No person, company, or group was designated under the order yesterday.
The order seeks to fill a gap in American authority to use financial sanctions to go after such offenders.
White House press secretary Tony Snow said the order targets terrorist and insurgent groups, including those assisted by Syria and Iran, that are not covered by existing authorities.
“What this is really aimed at is insurgents and those who come across the border,” Mr. Snow said.
As many as 80 suicide bombers a month cross into Iraq from Syria, the administration said last week in an interim progress report on the war.
The president’s new executive order comes as Republican support for the Iraq war has eroded in recent weeks.
The White House’s interim progress report found that the American-backed government in Baghdad has made spotty progress in meeting major targets of reform.
The 25-page administration report was issued in the fifth year of a war that has claimed the lives of more than 3,600 American troops and is costing American taxpayers an estimated $10 billion a month.
Against this backdrop, the State Department announced yesterday that America is ready to hold new direct talks with Iran on the deteriorating security situation in Iraq.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, in consultation with the secretaries of state and defense, is authorized to take action under the president’s new executive order.