Four heists that changed the world


Thieves somehow just went full Ocean’s 11 with a brazen, broad-daylight heist at the world’s most-visited museum: the Louvre.

These mysterious Clooneys seemingly pulled up in a truck, used its crane-ladder to reach a balcony, then pinched priceless Napoleonic crown jewels in just seven minutes.

And that’s after last month’s $700k heist across the Seine at the Museum of Natural History, plus the $7.5M museum theft down in Limoges.

It’s not just an affront to law and order, but also French history and culture, amid a febrile atmosphere of political-economic instability, all while a populist opposition circles. Ufff.

Anyway, like Carrie Bradshaw, we got to thinking… about the geopolitics of heists.

  1. Brazil’s central bank burglary, 2005

A gang spent three months tunnelling 78m (256ft) under two city blocks from a rented fake landscaping business, right into the vault of Brazil’s central bank! By the time bank officials realised, the thieves had already disappeared with $70M (or 3.5 tonnes) of cash.

The geopolitics? It came right as Brazil’s ambitious and newish president (today’s Lula) was pushing a more assertive role at the helm of a more integrated Latin America. So this heist not only reportedly bankrolled a Brazilian cartel’s expansion into more conflict with US counternarcotic efforts, but it also complicated Lula’s Mercosur talks with neighbours like Argentina and Uruguay — you want us to trust Brazilian governance and institutions even after a gang just emptied your vault?

Anyway, it’s not just criminal outsiders that’ve robbed central banks. For example…

  1. The looting of Iraq’s central bank, 2003

Two days before the US-led invasion of Iraq, Saddam Hussein’s son Qusay loaded $1B in cash onto three trucks, under handwritten orders from his father. US soldiers later ended up finding $650M hidden in the walls of one of the family’s riverside palaces.

The geopolitics? That recovered cash contained forensic breadcrumbs (serial-numbered bills) that helped investigators figure out how Saddam evaded sanctions, with lessons the world then applied to North Korea and Iran. Still, the missing cash likely ended up fuelling the post-invasion insurgency, not to mention straining Iraq’s ongoing reconstruction.

Anyway, it’s not just emerging markets or conflict zones prone to these tales. Consider…

  1. The Salomon Brothers treasury bond scandal, 1991

Paul Mozer (head of Salomon’s government bond trading desk) famously got caught rigging the very same US Treasury auctions that help finance US government spending.

The geopolitics? Mozer’s timing (like his ethics) proved terrible: the story broke just as the Soviet Union was crumbling, so it undermined US credibility right as DC was pitching itself as the responsible steward for a new world order. This all helped Japan, which was at the time pushing a more multipolar economic order (until its own bubble burst).

And speaking of bubbles bursting…

  1. The Antwerp diamond heist, 2003

This one involved an Italian crew posing as traders to map out the ultra-secure Antwerp Diamond Centre, before busting its 10 layered defences (infrared, seismic, magnetic, etc).

The geopolitics? The $100M heist was a massive deal in the way it:

  • a) undermined the new Kimberley process that was trying to stop conflict diamonds, and so…
  • b) strained Belgium’s ties with former colonies in Africa, where untraced diamonds went on to further fuel some conflicts, while
  • c) Israel argued untraced gem flows even enriched Hezbollah, and this all…
  • d) diluted Antwerp’s diamond dominance in favour of rivals Mumbai and Dubai, plus…
  • e) further emboldened America’s post-9/11 push for more scrutiny of financial flows, including among these kinds of off-book, trust-based, handshake sectors.

So it doesn’t take long to realise these thieves are often doing more than just stealing treasures: sometimes they also plunder trust, destabilise nations, and redraw regions.

Intrigue’s Take

What big picture insights might we glean from all this intrigue?

First, when thieves can consistently out-smart the state like this, it hints at broader cracks in governance and legitimacy that probably need attention.

Second, we’re curious how these kinds of crimes might evolve in a de-globalising world: they rest on the relative ease of spiriting an artefact across seamless borders to some mysterious buyer, but might a world pulling up its drawbridges complicate that model?

And third, these high-profile heists often trigger a regulatory response, leaving us to wonder if the weekend’s Louvre incident might get the ball rolling on better cross-border artefact tracking — the French not only have arguably the most at stake, but also among the most effective diplomatic services to drive a response.

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