Threat Finance
A question for a quiet professional - what kind of value could someone with a background in threat finance, anti money laundering, OFAC sanctions, etc bring to a team? Is there use for that kind of skillset from a member of a team or would that person be put to better use in an intelligence-specific MOS / role? i.e., the ability to discern Suspicious Activity Reports, identify networks / patterns, understand financial data, and so forth. Thanks in advance.
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Not specific to the skill and knowledge you have laid out, I would say that it is impossible to discerne what skills might benefit the team given the myriad of circumstances you might find yourself in. What will matter MORE is your ability to perform in your assigned MOS tasks to the best of your abilities in order to accomplish the mission of the team.
If your desire and drive comes from doing the type of work you express then you should find an organization that specifically needs that. |
Thanks Ret10Echo, really appreciate the guidance. If I'm understanding correctly, you're essentially saying there's too many variables in terms of what you might be tasked with to come in with some outside skillset saying "I have to use this". Maybe it'll be helpful, maybe not.
In case of interest, my question comes from reading papers like the one linked below about the "DoD's Role in the Interagency Counter Threat Finance Mission" which says "SOCOM is the DoD CTF lead component for synchronizing DoD CTF activities and operations", and being curious as to if and how SF is involved in that. Thanks again for the answer https://ssilrc.army.mil/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Emerging-DoD-Role-in-the-Interagency-Counter-Threat-Finance-Mission.pdf[/url] |
There are some really big brains down at SOCOM who work in that area. I’ve sat in on a couple of briefs. If you really want to pursue that, then I would think a degree in accounting should help, and then finding how to apply for a DA Civ job at SOCOM.
At the ODA level, it couldn’t hurt.... however it may not really apply to what situation you may find yourself in. Certainly couldn’t hurt in the 18F or 180A MOS, but you’ll need to be 18 something else first. |
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As Longwire mentions, there are paths to take based upon your personal desires and goals. |
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I would add that if you do want to serve, your stated strengths might better map to the MI (35 series) branch. Quote:
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And to foot-stomp on JJ's comment. The thought : "I want to do _________ AND I want to be an SF Soldier" never was in my head. Being the best SF Soldier was first and foremost from the time I dropped my packet. Everything else was gravy |
Thanks all, definitely appreciate the guidance once again. One of the reasons for the question is a curiosity about how SF would take on the threat of a nation-state actor like China. I have a hard time pulling my mind away from the image of special operations in the undeveloped world of Iraq / Afghanistan / Vietnam / etc but I have to imagine they'd be able to operate in a modern, urban center of Hong Kong, or Taiwan. I don't know what that looks like but if China's goal is to fight an unconventional and asymmetric war where "the battlefield is next to you, and the enemy is on the network - only there is no smell of gunpowder or the odor of blood" "Unrestricted Warfare" (https://www.c4i.org/unrestricted.pdf), I can't help but be curious as to how SF adapts to that.
https://www.c4i.org/unrestricted.pdf |
ABW, without me going into all kinds of, or any detail at all, a Special Forces Team has an entire country’s intelligence apparatus standing behind it. From the three or four experts on the Team, to the Company, Battalion and Group that provides direct support, to an entire level of three letter alphabet agencies in and around Washington DC.
From the eight expert knuckle-draggers that get the job done they are led by three or four senior well educated and experienced experts that have over 15 or more years of experience each in waging the kind of war you mention. There is a reason U.S. Army Special Forces is the best and most revered conventional and unconventional warfare specialists in the world. It’s not about the 12 guys on the Team. It’s about the hundreds or thousands that stand behind them. Everyone has an important role in the success of a mission. Maybe you do too. Whether it’s on the ground or providing the intelligence and analysis that supports it. |
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" Special Forces Berlin: Clandestine Cold War Operations of the US Army’s Elite, 1956-1990 (Casemate US/UK, Feb 2017) by James Stejskal. " and H-912 transport container for Mk-54, SADM Surprisingly there are a bunch of these crusty old bastards still with us and the game(s) continue :munchin |
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You also led me to the below quote from another part of this forum that I found interesting - Quote:
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That town and the surrounding AO was Wild West (or East) back then. Wheee doggies. :D |
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All I can say is - I know who I'm not putting in charge of the Op Fund.
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