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I recently read in a news article that a large amount of Libyan banknotes printed in Russia were seized in Malta following an order coming from the USA. Both Russia and the USA have geostrategic interests in this part of the world so I assume this action is probably linked to an economic warfare operation. Banknotes normally include a large amount of security features that prevent people to easily counterfeit them but I assume that for large countries like China, Russia or the USA it is not a big deal to print banknotes of a foreign country. In time of war it can be quite interesting for a large country to print a lot of banknotes and spread them in the economy of an adversary country to destabilize its economy. But putting apart the above mentioned news article I wasn't able to find evidences of such a scenario so my question is :

Are there historical cases of country A printing the currency of country B for the main purpose of economic warfare ?

Genorme
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    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Bernhard (an exercise by Nazi Germany to forge British bank notes. The initial plan was to drop the notes over Britain to bring about a collapse of the British economy during the Second World War. ) – KarmaPeasant Jul 21 '20 at 10:30
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    @user161005 Please post answers as answers. – Giskard Jul 21 '20 at 10:59
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  • i’ve heard media reports to this effect, but they were never verified. 2) Counterfeiting is likely only useful to support intelligence operations in countries that are functional. Otherwise, the flow of notes is in institutional hands, and new inflows would stand out. In countries where the banking system is non-functional, counterfeiting might be easier.
  • – Brian Romanchuk Jul 21 '20 at 11:09
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  • You might be interested: https://economics.stackexchange.com/questions/19774/why-cant-countries-print-another-countrys-currency – Allure Jul 22 '20 at 02:48
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    Plenty of. For example Napoleon attempted to do so during his campaign in Russia: https://museum.goznak.ru/en/content/news/227/ . There is also a rather comprehensive list here: http://currency_den.tripod.com/War_Counterfeits/war.html – Dan M. Jul 22 '20 at 13:37
  • I think North Korea has printed counterfiet U.S. $100 bills, not simply for economic warfare, but because they could use the money. – Michael Hardy Jul 22 '20 at 17:25
  • @user161005 Of course we know now this would have been a massive economic stimulus for GB if the banknotes had been good enough to go undetected. – Spehro Pefhany Jul 23 '20 at 15:02
  • @DanM. Please post answers as answers, not as comments. We don’t have the appropriate quality control measures for comments. – Tim Jul 24 '20 at 07:33