(Thanks to P&N B. for sending me this most interesting article! The Saker)
original source: http://chinascope.org/archives/6458
[Editor’s Note: In April, Qiao Liang, a People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Major-General, gave a speech at a book study forum of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) Central Committee and government office. Qiao is the PLA strategist who co-authored the book, “Unrestricted War.”
In his speech, Qiao explained that he has been studying finance theories and concluded that the U.S. enforces the dollar as the global currency to preserve its hegemony over the world. The U.S. will try everything, including war, to maintain the dollar’s dominance in global trading. He also discussed China’s strategy, to rise as a super power, amid the U.S.’s containment.
The following are excerpts from his speech.] [1]
I. The Situation Surrounding China and the Secret of the U.S. Dollar Index Cycle
A. The First Financial Empire in History
People working on economics or in the finance field are probably more suited to talk about this topic. I will discuss this topic from the [national] strategy angle.
On August 15, 1971, when the U.S. dollar stopped being pegged to gold, the dollar ship threw away its anchor, which was gold.
Let’s take a step back. In July 1944, to help the U.S. to take over the currency hegemony from the British Empire, President Roosevelt pushed for three world systems: the political system – the United Nations; the trade system – the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which later became the World Trade Organization (WTO); and the currency financial system – the Bretton Woods system.
The Americans’ desire was to establish the U.S. dollar’s hegemony over the world via the Bretton Woods system. However, from 1944 to 1971, the dollar didn’t gain that power. What blocked the dollar? It was gold.
When the Bretton Woods system was set up, the U.S. promised the world that the U.S. dollar would be pegged to gold while every other country’s currency could peg to the dollar. One ounce of gold was fixed at US$35. With this promise, the U.S. couldn’t do anything according to its own will. In other words, the Americans couldn’t print an unlimited number of dollars. Whenever it printed a dollar bill, it had to add one additional ounce of gold into its treasury as a reserve.
The U.S. made that promise to the world because it held eighty percent of the world’s gold reserve at that time. The Americans thought that, with that much gold in hand, it was enough to support the U.S. dollar’s creditability.
However, it was not that simple. The U.S. stupidly got involved in the Korean War and the Vietnam War, which cost it dearly. The Vietnam War especially cost US$800 billion. The cost became so much that the U.S. couldn’t bear it. Based on the U.S.’s promise, every time it spent US$35, it meant a loss of one ounce of gold.
By August 1971, the Americans had about 8,800 tons of gold left. They knew they were in trouble. Other people continued creating new trouble for them. For example, French President De Gaulle didn’t trust the U.S. dollar. He asked the French Finance Minister and Central Bank President and was told that France had about US$2.3 billion dollars in reserve. He told them to sell all of that for gold. Some other countries followed suit.
Thus, on August 15, 1971, then U.S. President Nixon announced that the U.S. stopped pegging the dollar to gold. It was the beginning of the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, and also a way in which the Americans cheated the world. However, the world didn’t realize it.
People trusted the U.S. dollar because it was supported by gold. The U.S. dollar had been the international currency, the settlement currency, and the reserve currency for over 20 years. People were used to the dollar. When the U.S. dollar suddenly lost its tie to gold, it then, in theory, became a pure piece of green paper. Why did people still use it?
In theory people could stop using it., Bbut in practice what would people use for international settlement? Currency is a measure of value. If people stopped using the U.S. dollar, was there any other currency they trusted?
Thus, the Americans took advantage of people’s inertia and forced the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to accept the U.S. condition that the world’s oil trade must settle in U.S. dollars. Previously, oil trades were settled in any international currency, but, since October 1973, settlement was limited to the U.S. dollar only.
After unpegging from precious metal, the Americans linked their dollar to oil. Why? The Americans were very clear: people might dislike the U.S. dollar, but they could not live without energy. Every country needed development and thus needed to consume energy. In this way, the need for oil translated into the need for the U.S. dollar. For the U.S., this was a very smart move.
Not many people had a clear understanding of this at the time. People, including economists and financial experts, didn’t realize that the most important thing in the 20th century was not World War I, World War II, or the disintegration of the USSR, but rather the August 15, 1971, disconnection between the U.S. dollar and gold.
Since that day, a true financial empire has emerged, the U.S. dollar’s hegemony has been established, and we have entered a true paper currency era. There is no precious metal behind the U.S. dollar. The government’s credit is the sole support for the U.S. dollar. The U.S. makes a profit from the whole world. This means that the Americans can obtain material wealth from the world by printing a piece of green paper.
This has never happened in the world before. Throughout mankind’s history there have been many ways for people to obtain wealth: an exchange with currency, gold, or silver, or using war to grab things (however, war is very costly). When the U.S. dollar became just a piece of green paper, the cost for the U.S. to make money became extremely low.
Without the restriction of gold, the U.S. can print dollars at will. If they keep a large amount of dollars inside the U.S., it will certainly create inflation. If they export dollars to the world, the whole world is helping the U.S. to deal with its inflation. That’s why inflation is not that high in the U.S.
However, once the U.S. exports its dollar to the world, it doesn’t have much money. If it continues to print money, the U.S. dollar will keep devaluating, which is not good for the Americans. Therefore, the U.S. Federal Reserve is not, as some people have imagined, a central bank that prints money irresponsibly. The Federal Reserve knows what “restriction” means. From its establishment in 1913 through 2013, the Federal Reserve only printed US$10 trillion.
This may lead people to criticize China’s Central Bank, which has printed 120 trillion yuan (around US$20 trillion using an exchange rate of 6.2 yuan per dollar) since 1954. Actually this does not mean China is printing money without any restriction either. Since its opening up, China has earned a lot of U.S. dollars and also a large amount of dollars has flown into China as investments.
China’s foreign currency control prevents the U.S. dollar from circulating in China. When the U.S. dollar comes, for circulation in China, China’s Central Bank has to print a corresponding amount of renminbi instead.
However, a foreign investor can withdraw its money out of China after making money. Also we need to spend our foreign reserves to buy energy, products, and technology. As a result, a large amount of U.S. dollars has flown out of China, but a corresponding amount of renminbi has stayed in China. You can’t destroy those renminbi, so China ends up with more renminbi than its foreign reserve.
China’s Central Bank admitted that it overprinted 20 billion yuan. This huge amount all stayed in China. This is a topic that I will discuss later – why we should make the renminbi an international currency.
B. The Relationship between the U.S. Dollar Index Cycle and the Global Economy
The U.S. avoided high inflation by letting the dollar circulate globally. It also needs to restrain the printing of dollars to avoid a dollar devaluation. Then what should it do when it runs out of dollars?
The Americans came up with a solution: issuing debt to bring the dollar back to the U.S. The Americans started to play a game of printing money with one hand and borrowing money with the other hand. Printing money can make money. Borrowing money can also make money. This financial economy (using money to make money) is much easier than the real (industry-based) economy. Why will it bother with manufacturing industries that have only low value-adding capabilities?
Since August 15, 1971, the U.S. has gradually stopped its real economy and moved into a virtual economy. It has become an “empty” economy state. Today’s U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has reached US$18 trillion, but only $5 trillion is from the real economy.
By issuing debt, the U.S. brings a large amount of dollars from overseas back to the U.S.’s three big markets: the commodity market, the Treasury Bills market, and the stock market. The U.S. repeats this cycle to make money: printing money, exporting money overseas, and bringing money back. The U.S. has thus become a financial empire.
Many people think that imperialism stopped after the U.K. became weak. Actually, the U.S. has conducted a hidden imperialism through the U.S. dollar and has made other countries its financial colony. Today, many countries, including China, have their own sovereignty, Constitution, and government, but they are dependent on the U.S. dollar. Their products are measured in dollars and they have to hand over their material wealth to the U.S. in exchange for the U.S. dollar.
This can be seen clearly in the cycle of the U.S. dollar index over the past 40 years. Since 1971, when the U.S. started to print money freely, the U.S. dollar index has been dropping in value. For ten years, the index has kept going down, indicating that it was overprinted.
Actually, it was not necessarily a bad thing for the world when the U.S. dollar index went down. It meant an increase in the supply of dollars and a large outflow of dollars to other countries. A lot of U.S. dollars went to Latin America. This investment created the economic boom in Latin America in the 1970s.
In 1979, after flooding the world with U.S. dollars for nearly 10 years, the Americans decided to reverse the process. The U.S. dollar index started climbing in 1979. Dollars flew back to the U.S. and other regions received fewer dollars. Latin America’s economy boomed due to an ample supply of dollar investment, but this suddenly stopped as its investments dried up.
The Latin American countries tried to save themselves.
Argentina, which once had its per capita GDP among the ranks of the developed countries, was then the first to drop into a recession. Unfortunately, then Argentine President Galtieri, who came to power through a military coup, chose to use a war to solve the problem. He turned his eyes toward the Malvinas Islands (which the British called the Falkland Islands), which are 400 miles away from Argentina. These islands had been under British rule for over 100 years. Galtieri decided to take them back.
Of course, he couldn’t take on a war without the U.S.’s blessing. He sent an intermediary to inquire about the U.S.’s opinion. U.S. President Reagan answered it lightly: it was between you and the U.K.; the U.S. had no position and would stay neutral. Galtieri took it as acquiescence by the U.S. He started the war and took over the islands with ease. The Argentinians were crazy.
However, then U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher claimed that they would absolutely not accept it and forced the U.S. to speak out. Reagan tore off his neutral mask, issuing a statement to blame Argentina for the invasion and to stand by the U.K. The British dispatched a task force with an aircraft carrier, travelling 8,000 miles, to take the Malvinas Islands back.
At the same time, the U.S. dollar appreciated and international capital flew back to the U.S. just as the U.S. wished. When the Malvinas Islands War started, investors around the world concluded that a regional crisis had started in Latin America and the Latin American investment environment would deteriorate. So investors withdrew their capital from there. The Federal Reserve, at the same time, announced an increase in interest rates, which further accelerated the withdrawal of capital from Latin America.
The Latin American economy dropped to the bottom. The capital leaving there went to the U.S.’s three big markets. It gave the U.S. the first bull market since the dollar had been unpegged from gold. The U.S. dollar index jumped from 60 to 120, a 100 percent increase.
The Americans didn’t stop after making big money from their bull market. Some took the money they just made and went back to Latin America to buy the good assets whose prices had just fallen to the ground. The U.S. harvested handsomely from Latin America’s economy.
If this had happened only once, it could be argued as a small probability event. As it has occurred repeatedly, it indicates an intended pattern.
In 1986, after the first “ten years of a weak U.S. dollar following six years of a strong dollar,” the U.S. dollar index started to decline again. Ten years later, in 1997, the dollar index started climbing. This time, the strong dollar also lasted for six years.
During the second ten-year weak U.S. dollar cycle, U.S. dollars went mainly to Asia. What was the hottest investment concept in 1980s? It was the “Asian Tigers.” Many people thought it was due to Asians’ hard work and how smart they were. Actually the big reason was the ample investment of U.S. dollars.
When the Asian economy started to prosper, the Americans felt it was time to harvest. Thus, in 1997, after ten years of a weak dollar, the Americans reduced the money supply to Asia and created a strong dollar. Many Asian companies and industries faced an insufficient money supply. The area showed signs of being on the verge of a recession and a financial crisis.
A last straw was needed to break the camel’s back. What was that straw? It was a regional crisis. Should there be a war like the Argentines had? Not necessarily. War is not the only way to create a regional crisis.
Thus we saw that a financial investor called “Soros” took his Quantum Fund, as well as over one hundred other hedge funds in the world, and started a wolf attack on Asia’s weakest economy, Thailand. They attacked Thailand’s currency Thai Baht for a week. This created the Baht crisis. Then it spread south to Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Then it moved north to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, and even Russia. Thus the East Asia financial crisis fully exploded.
The camel fell to the ground. The world’s investors concluded that the Asian investment environment had gone south and withdrew their money. The U.S. Federal Reserve promptly blew the horn and increased the dollar’s interest rate. The capital coming out of Asia flew to the U.S.’s three big markets, creating the second big bull market in the U.S.
When the Americans made ample money, they followed the same approach they did in Latin America: they took the money that they made from the Asian financial crisis back to Asia to buy Asia’s good assets which, by then, were at their bottom price. The Asian economy had no capacity to fight back.
The only lucky survivor in this crisis was China.
C. Now, It Is Time to Harvest China
It was as precise as the tide; the U.S. dollar was strong for six years. Then, in 2002, it started getting weak. Following the same pattern, it stayed weak for ten years. In 2012, the Americans started to prepare to make it strong. They used the same approach: create a regional crisis for other people.
Therefore, we saw that several events happened in relation to China: the Cheonan sinking event, the dispute over the Senkaku Islands (Diaoyu Islands in Chinese), and the dispute over Scarborough Shoal (the Huangyan Island in Chinese). All these happened during this period. The conflict between China and the Philippians over Huangyan Island and the conflict between China and Japan over the Diaoyu Islands, might not appear to have much to do with the U.S. dollar index, but was it really that case? Why did it happen exactly in the tenth year of the U.S. dollar being weak?
Unfortunately, the U.S. played with too much fire [in its own mortgage market] earlier and got itself into a financial crisis in 2008. This delayed the timing of the U.S. dollar’s hike a bit.
If we acknowledge that there is a U.S. dollar index cycle and the Americans use this cycle to harvest from other countries, then we can conclude that it was time for the Americans to harvest China. Why? Because China had obtained the largest amount of investment from the world. The size of China’s economy was no longer the size of a single county; it was even bigger than the whole of Latin America and about the same size as East Asia’s economy.
Since the Diaoyu Islands conflict and the Huangyan Island conflict, incidents have kept popping up around China, including the confrontation over China’s 981 oil rigs with Vietnam and Hong Kong’s “Occupy Central” event. Can they still be viewed as simply accidental?
I accompanied General Liu Yazhou, the Political Commissar of the National Defense University, to visit Hong Kong in May 2014. At that time, we heard that the “Occupy Central” movement was being planned and could take place by end of the month. However, it didn’t happen in May, June, July, or August.
What happened? What were they waiting for?
Let’s look at another time table: the U.S. Federal Reserve’s exit from the Quantitative Easing (QE) policy. The U.S. said it would stop QE at the beginning of 2014. But it stayed with the QE policy in April, May, June, July, and August. As long as it was in QE, it kept overprinting dollars and the dollar‘s price couldn’t go up. Thus, Hong Kong’s “Occupy Central” should not happen either.
At the end of September, the Federal Reserve announced the U.S. would exist from QE. The dollar started going up. Then Hong Kong’s “Occupy Central” broke out in early October.
Actually, the Diaoyu Islands, Huangyan Island, the 981 rigs, and Hong Kong’s “Occupy Central” movement were all bombs. The successful explosion of any one of them would lead to a regional crisis or a worsened investment environment around China. That would force the withdrawal of a large amount of investment from this region, which would then return to the U.S.
Unfortunately, this time the American’s opponent was China. China used “Tai chi” movements to cool down each crisis. As of today, the last straw to break the camel’s back has yet to occur and the Camel is still standing.
The camel didn’t break. Therefore, the Federal Reserve couldn’t blow its horn to increase the interest rate, either. The Americans realized that it was hard for them to harvest China, so they looked for an alternative.
Where else did they target? Ukraine, the connection between the EU and Russia. Of course there were some problems under Ukraine President Yanukovych’s administration, but the reason that the Americans picked it was not simply because of his problem. They had three goals: teach a lesson to Yanukovych who didn’t listen to the U.S., prevent the EU from getting too close to Russia, and create a bad investment environment in Europe.
Thus, a “color revolution,” took place, which the Ukrainians themselves appeared to have led. The U.S. achieved its goal unexpectedly: Russian President Putin took over Crimea. Though the Americans did not plan it, it gave the Americans better reasons to pressure the EU and Japan to join the U.S. in sanctioning Russia, adding more pressure to the EU’s economy.
Why did the Americans do this? People tend to analyze it from the geo-political angle, but rarely the capital angle. After the Ukraine crisis, statistics showed over US$1 trillion in capital left Europe. The U.S. got what it wanted: if it couldn’t get dollars out of China, it would get dollars out of Europe.
However, the next step didn’t occur as the Americans planned. The capital out of Europe didn’t go to the U.S. Instead, it went to Hong Kong.
One reason was that the global investors preferred China, which claimed the world’s number one economic growth rate, despite the fact that its economy started to cool down. The other reason was that China announced that it would implement the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect. Investors over the world wanted to get a handsome return through the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect.
In the past, Western capital was cautious about entering China’s stock market. A key reason was China’s strict foreign currency control: you can come in freely but you can’t get out at will. After the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect, they could invest in Shanghai’s market from Hong Kong and leave immediately after making a profit. Therefore, over US$1 trillion stayed in Hong Kong.
This is why the hand behind “Occupy Central” has kept planning a comeback and has not wanted to stop. The Americans need to create a regional crisis for China, to get the money back to the U.S.
Why does the U.S. economy rely so desperately on capital flowing back to its market? It is because, since 1971, the U.S. has given up producing real products. They called the real economy’s low-end or low-value-creating manufacturing industries garbage industries or sunset industries and transferred them to developing countries, especially China. Besides the high-end industries, such as IBM and Microsoft, that it kept, 70 percent of its people moved to finance and financial services industries. The U.S. has completely become a hollow state which has little real economy to offer investors a big return.
The Americans have no choice but to open the door of the virtual economy, which is its three big markets. It wants to get the money from the world into these three markets so that it can make money. Then it can use that money to harvest other countries.
The Americans only have this one way to survive now. We call it the U.S.’s national survival strategy. The U.S. needs a large amount of capital flowing back to sustain its daily life and its economy. If any country blocks that capital flow, it is the enemy of the U.S.
II. Whose Lunch Will China Take If China Rises Quickly?
A. Why Did the Birth of the Euro Lead to a War in Europe?
On January 1, 1999, the euro was officially born. Three months later, NATO started its war against Yugoslavia. Many people thought the U.S. and NATO fought the war to stop the Milosevic administration’s genocide of the Albanians, a scary humanitarian tragedy. After the war, this was soon proved to be a lie. The Americans acknowledged it was a setup, done jointly by the CIA and the Western media. The goal was to attack the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
However, was the Kosovo War really to attack the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia? The Europeans first overwhelmingly believed in this theory. However, after this 72-day war, they found they had been cheated.
When the euro was first created, the Europeans had a lot of confidence. The euro’s exchange rate to the U.S. dollar was 1:1.07. After 72 days of bombing, the Europeans found something was not right: Their euro was ruined. The euro lost 30 percent of its value; one euro could only get 0.86 dollars. The Europeans realized that they had been cheated. This was why later, when the U.S. insisted on having a war with Iraq, France and Germany were strongly against it.
Some people say that the Western democratic countries don’t fight among themselves. It is true that, since World War II, the Western countries haven’t fought among themselves, but that does not mean they do not have any military conflicts or economic or financial wars among themselves.
The Kosovo War was an indirect financial war that the Americans fought against the euro. On the surface it was against Yugoslavia, but the euro got the real hit. This was because the birth of the euro touched the U.S. dollar’s lunch. Before, the U.S. dollar was used to commanding 80 percent of the international transaction market. It dropped to 60 percent of the market. The euro cut a big pie from the dollar.
The European Union (EU), a US$27 trillion economy when formed, surpassed the economy of the North American Free Trade Area (FTA) with a size of US$24-25 trillion, becoming the world’s largest economic zone. For such a large economy, of course the EU didn’t want to use the dollar to handle its trades, so it created the euro. The introduction of the euro took away one third of the dollar’s settlement business – as of now, 23 percent of the world trade is settled in euros.
In the beginning, the Americans were not vigilant about the euro. It was a bit late when they found out that it would challenge the dollar’s hegemony. So the U.S. needed a way to press down the EU and the euro, as well as other possible challengers.
B. What Is the U.S. Trying to Balance with Its “Asia-Pacific Rebalance” Strategy?
China’s rise made China the new challenger [to the dollar’s global dominance]. The fights over the Diaoyu Islands and the Huangyan Island were the U.S.’s latest attempt to suppress its challenger.
Though these two political events around China’s border didn’t cause a large amount of capital to flee out of China, the Americans achieved their partials goals – two of China’s efforts died. At the beginning of 2012, China, Japan, and South Korea were close to reaching an agreement on the negotiation of the Northeast Asia FTA. In April 2012, China and Japan had also reached a preliminary agreement on currency exchange and on holding each other’s national debts. However, the conflict over the Diaoyu Islands and Huangyan Island occurred, blowing away the FTA and the currency exchange.
A few years later, China finally finished the negation with South Korea on the bilateral FTA, but it does not have much significance. Why? The original Northeast Asia FTA, once established, would include China, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan. It would be the third largest economy in the world, with a size of over US$20 trillion. Furthermore, it would likely expand south to integrate with the ASEAN FTA, forming the East Asia FTA. That would become the largest economy in the world, with a magnitude of over
US$30 trillion in size.
We can further imagine that the East Asia FTA could continue expanding: adding India and South Asia in the south, the five Central Asian countries in the north, and the West Asia countries (part of the Middle East) in the west. This Asia FTA would then have a scale surpassing US$50 trillion, more than the EU and U.S. combined. For such a big FTA, would it use the euro or the dollar to settle its internal trade? Of course not. This meant that the Asian Dollar would be born.
I think, if indeed there is an Asia FTA, we should promote the renminbi to be the primary currency of Asia, just as the U.S. dollar first became the currency of North America and then the currency of the world. Pushing the renminbi to the international stage is far more than what we talked about previously with the “Renminbi going abroad” or letting the renminbi play a role in the “One Belt, One Path.” It will, along with the dollar and the euro, share the world.
If the Chinese could think of this, couldn’t the Americans think of it? When the Americans announced that they would shift their focus to the East, they pushed the Japanese to create an issue over the Diaoyu Islands and they supported the Philippines to have a confrontation with China over the Huangyan Island. We can’t be so naive as to think this was just caused by the right-wing Japanese or by the Philippines President Aquino.
It was the Americans’ deep and careful thought to prevent the renminbi from being a challenger to the dollar. The Americans were very clear about what they were doing. If the Northeast Asia FTA were formed, with its chain reaction, the renminbi, the euro, and the dollar each would claim one third of the world trading market. Then for the U.S., would it still have the currency hegemony if it had only one third of it? Without a real economy, if it were to lose its currency hegemony, how could the U.S. remain as the world’s dominator?
Once one understands this, he will know why, behind every one of China’s problem, the U.S. is there. The U.S. is preventing China’s “trouble” [to the U.S.] up front. Thus it has created troubles for China everywhere. What does the U.S. try to “rebalance” in the Asia-Pacific? Does it really want to play the role of balancer between China and Japan, China and the Philippines, and China and other countries? Of course not. It has only one goal in mind: nullify the trend of China’s rise.
III. The Secret That the U.S. Military Is Fighting for the Dollar
A. The Iraq War and Whose Currency Was Used for Oil Trades
People all say that the strength of the U.S. is based on three pillars: currency, technology, and military force. Actually today we can see that the real backbone of the U.S. is its currency and military force. The backing of its currency is its military force.
Every country in the world spends a large amount of money when it has a war. The U.S., however, is unique. It can also make money while spending money on a war. No other country can do that.
Why did the Americans fight a war in Iraq? Many people would answer, “For oil.” However, did the Americans truly fight for oil? No. If they indeed fought for oil, why didn’t they take a single barrel of oil out of Iraq? Also, the crude oil price jumped to US$149 a barrel after the war from a pre-war price of $38 a barrel. The American people didn’t get a low oil price after its army occupied Iraq.
Therefore, the U.S. fought the war not for oil, but for the dollar. Why? The reason was simple. To control the world, the U.S. needed the whole world to use the dollar. It was a great move in 1973 to force Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries to install the dollar as the settlement currency for oil trades.
Once you understand that, you can understand why the U.S. fought a war in an oil producing country. The direct result of fighting a war in an oil producing country was to increase the price oil. Once the oil price shot up, the demand for the dollar also went up.
For example, if you had US$38, you could buy a barrel of crude oil before the war. After the war, the price went up over four times to $149. Your $38 could only get you a quarter of a barrel. How could you get the other three quarters? You had to use your products and resources to trade the Americans for dollar. Then the U.S. government could openly, legitimately print more dollars. This was the secret.
I also want to tell everyone, the U.S.’s war in Iraq was not only for that goal. It was also to keep the dollar’s hegemony. Saddam didn’t support terrorists or Al-Qaeda, nor did it have weapons of mass destruction. But why was he still hung? It was because he played a game between the U.S. and EU. After the euro was created in 1999, he announced that Iraq’s oil trade would be settled in euros. This angered the Americans, especially when many other countries followed suit. Russian President Putin, Iranian President Ahmadinejad, and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez all made the same announcement. How could the Americans accept this?
Some people may think what I said was a fairy tale. Let’s take a look at what the America did after it won the Iraq War. Before they arrested Saddam, the Americans rushed to form the temporary Iraqi government. The first order that the temporary government published was to announce that the Iraqi oil trade switched from the euro back to the dollar for settlement. This showed that America was fighting for its dollar.
B. The Afghanistan War and the Net-flow of Capital
Someone may say, “I can see that [the Americans fought] the Iraq War for the dollar. Afghanistan does not produce oil. Then it shouldn’t be for the dollar that the Americans fought the Afghanistan War. Also the war was after the September 11 attack. The whole world knew it was to revenge the Al-Qaeda and punish the Taliban which supported the Al-Qaeda.”
Was that true? The Afghanistan War started a month after September 11. It started in a rush. By the middle of the war, American used up all of its cruise missiles. As the war continued, the U.S. Defense Department had to open its nuclear weaponry. It took out 1,000 nuclear cruise missiles, replaced the nuclear warheads with conventional warheads, and fired another 900 cruise missiles to win the war. Obviously the Americans were not ready for this war. Why did they rush into it?
That’s because the Americans couldn’t wait any longer. Their financial life was in big trouble. In the early 21st Century, as a country without real material producing industries, to keep it running at the current level, the U.S. needed to have a net inflow of US$700 billion from other countries every year. After the September 11 event, the global investors showed great concern about the investment environment in the U.S. As a result, US$300 billion fled from the U.S.
This forced the U.S. to fight a war quickly to stop the fleeing. It was not only to punish the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, but also to rebuild the global investors’ confidence. After the first cruise missiles exploded in Kabul, the Dow Jones index jumped up 600 points in one day. The capital that left the U.S. started to flow back. By the end of 2001, US$400 billion came back to the U.S. This showed again that the Afghanistan War was fought for the dollar and for capital.
C. Why Will the Prompt Global Strike System Replace Aircraft Carriers?
Many Chinese have great hope for China’s aircraft carrier. They have seen aircraft carrier’s importance in the past and China’s Liaoning ship let China join the rank of owners of aircraft carriers.
However, though the aircraft carrier is still a symbol for a major power in the world, it is now only a symbol.
That is because the aircraft carrier is a product of the logistics era. When Great Britain was at its peak, it pushed for global trade – it sent its products to the world and took back the world’s resources – so it needed a strong navy to ensure safety over the water. The creation of the aircraft carrier also served to control the ocean and the sea path. At that time the saying was, “Logistics is the key.” Whoever controlled the ocean controlled the flow of global wealth.
Now capital is the key. A few strokes on a computer keyboard can move billions or even trillions [of dollars] of capital from one location to another. An aircraft carrier can keep up with the speed of logistics, but it can’t keep up with the flow of capital. It is thus unable to control global capital.
Then today, what measure can keep up with the direction, speed, and volume of the flow of global capital over the Internet? American is developing a huge prompt global strike system that will allow it to hit any capital-concentrated region with ballistic missiles, supersonic planes, and cruise missiles that travel at five or ten times sonic speed. The U.S. claims that it can hit any place on the earth in 28 minutes. No matter where capital is, as long as the Americans do not want it to be there, its missiles can go there in 28 minutes and drive the capital out. This is why the prompt global strike system will inevitably replace aircraft carriers.
Of course, the aircraft carrier also has its own value, such as safeguarding the sea path or conducting a humanitarian mission. It is a good platform over the sea.
IV. The “Air Sea Battle” Will Not Solve the U.S.’s Problem
America brought up the concept of “Air Sea Battle” when designing responses to China’s rise. It was first introduced in 2010. As a war concept, it meant jointly combining the powers of the air force and the navy when fighting against China. The creation of this concept showed that the American military was getting weaker. In the past, the U.S. thought that it could use either air strikes or the navy to strike China. Now it finds that the use of only one source does not provide it with military superiority over China. It needs to join the two forces together. That’s how this “air sea battle” concept came into being.
The Americans think that China and the U.S. won’t get into a war in the next ten years. After studying China’s military development, the Americans realize that the U.S.’s current military capability does not guarantee itself an advantage over China’s strengths, such as China’s ability to attack aircraft carriers and to destroy space systems. Therefore, the U.S. needs to spend another ten years to develop a more advanced battle system to offset China’s advantage.
It may mean that the U.S. has moved the timetable of a war with China to ten years from now. Though there may not be a war for ten years, we must prepare ourselves for it. If we don’t want a war to happen in ten years, we need do get our things done within the next ten years, including preparing for war.
V. The Strategic Meaning of the “One Belt, One Road” Strategy
The Americans like basketball and boxing. Boxing shows the American’s typical nature of respecting power: a direct hit with full strength and the hope of knocking the opponent out. Everything is straightforward.
The Chinese are quite the opposite. Chinese prefer ambiguity and “using softness to conquer strength.” One doesn’t seek to knock his opponent out, but he will defuse all of his opponent’s attacks. Chinese like Tai-chi, which is a higher level of art then boxing.
The “One Belt, One Road” strategy reflects this philosophy.
Throughout history, whenever a great power rises, there is a corresponding globalization movement. This means that globalization is not a phenomenon that has continued from the past all the way to the present; rather it belongs to a great power. The Roman Empire had its own globalization. The Qin Dynasty in China (around 200 B.C.) had its own globalization.
Every globalization was initiated by a rising empire. And that globalization was also limited by the empire’s own strength. The farthest location that the empire’s power could influence and its transportation means could reach defined the boundary of its globalization. Therefore, in today’s view, both the Roman Empire’s globalization and the Qin Dynasty’s globalization were only considered to be a regional expansion. “Globalization” on today’s terms started with the British Empire. The U.S. continued the British trade globalization for a while. Then it switched to U.S. dollar globalization.
China’s “One Belt, One Road” is not simply to join the global economic system, which is a globalization under the U.S. dollar. As a rising super power, the “One Belt, One Road” strategy is the beginning of China’s own globalization. It is a necessary globalization process that a super power must have during the phase of its rise.
“One Belt, One Road” is the best super power strategy that China can bring up at this moment, because it is a counter measure to the U.S. strategy of shifting focus to the East.
Someone may ask: “A counter measure should be in the opposite direction of the force coming toward you. How can you turn your back on the U.S.?” (The U.S. is pressing China from the east over the Pacific Ocean, but China turns its back on the pressure and moves to the west.) That’s right. The “One Belt, One Road” strategy is China’s indirect counter to the U.S. shift to the East. China turns its back on the U.S. [to avoid direct confrontation]. You pressure me [from the east], I walk to the west, not because I want to avoid you, nor because I am afraid of you, but rather because this is a smart move to defuse the pressure you bring to me.
The “One Belt, One Road” strategy does not require the two paths happen in parallel. It should have priorities. Sea power is still China’s weakness, so we can focus on the land path first. The “One Belt” is the primary direction. This also means that we need to revisit the importance of the army.
Some people say that China’s army is the best in the world. It is true if it is inside China: the Chinese army will beat whoever invades China’s land. The problem is that China’s army may not have the capability to go outside China to fight and win a war?
I talked about this issue last year at the Global Times annual meeting. I said that America chose a wrong opponent when it chose China as its opponent and pressured China. The real threat to the U.S. in the future is not China, but rather the U.S. itself. The U.S. will bury itself. That’s because it has not yet realized that a big era is coming and the financial capitalism that the U.S. represents will reach its peak and then start falling. On the one hand, the U.S. has already taken full advantage of benefits that capital generates. On the other hand, via the technological innovation that the U.S. leads, the U.S. pushes the Internet, big data, and cloud computing to an extreme. These tools will eventually become the forces that end financial capitalism.
Taobao.com and tmall.com, both under the Alibaba company, registered 50.7 billion yuan (US$8.2 billion) in sales on November 11, 2014. A few weeks later, the total Internet sales plus the in-store sales in the U.S. market in the three-day Thanks-giving weekend was only 40.7 billion yuan (US$6.6 billion). The 50.7 billion yuan is only the sales for one-day on Alibaba, not including 163.com, qq.com, jd.com, and other online stores in China, nor including any physical store sales.
All Alibaba’s sales were done via Alipay (an electronic payment system). What does Alipay mean? It means that currency is out of the trade platform. The U.S. hegemony is based on its dollar. What is the dollar? It is a currency. In the future, when we stop using currency to complete sales, the traditional currency will be useless. Will the empire that is established on currency still exist? That is the question that the Americans should think about.
3D printing also represents a future direction. It will create fundamental change to the human production process. When the production process changes and the trading process changes, the world will go through a fundamental change. History shows that these two changes, not other factors, are the real cause for society’s change.
Today’s capital may disappear when currency disappears. When the production method changes along the line of 3D printing, the human world will step into a new social mode. At that time, China and the U.S. will stand at the same starting line of the Internet, big data, and cloud computing. The competition at that time will depend on who will be the first to step through this new door, not on who will press the other down. From this point of view, I say that the U.S. has chosen the wrong opponent.
America’s real opponent is itself and this change. America has shown a surprising slowness in realizing this point. That is because America has too much invested in keeping its hegemonic position. It does not want to share power with other countries, nor does it want to step together with others into the new social door behind which there are still many things unknown to us.
Endnotes:
[1] China Publication Online, “Qiao Liang: The U.S.’s Strategy of Shifting Focus to the East and China’s Strategy of Going to the West – China’s Strategic Choice in the Game between China and the U.S.,” April 15, 2015.
http://www.chuban.cc/dshd/jqjt/201504/t20150415_165579.html.
Here article from Alsdar Macleod doing analysis of the PLA’s Qiao Liang paper mentioned above:
https://wealth.goldmoney.com/research/goldmoney-insights/americas-financial-war-strategy
Excellent reading
Good to see the Chinese getting the broad picture very accurately.
What Qiao Liang misses completely, though, is the fact that America and the $ are only one of may tools in the Zionist box. Only when seen in context and interplay with a handful of other formidable tools, like the UK and the £, the EU and its €, Japan and its ¥, plus all International organizations and the World Bank and Bank of International Settlements, can the formidable challenges China faces be fully assessed.
All the currencies you mention are irrelevant, as they are all pegged to the dollar and neither they are backed up with any serious military force.
Or from a Marxist’s point of view – money (currency) is embodyment of social labour, ie. real products and services produced. Stop and think how many real things all those currencies represent and how much of it is just phantom value of overpriced stocks and bonds which can lose 95% of their value overnight.
Or US’ GDP for example, of which almost 18% is “healthcare”. So we are to believe that it’s good for their economy that so much money is spent on sick and dying people?
No, the entire western world is an economical (and moral) hollow rotten pumpkin. Sooner or later, it’s all going to collapse and snowball straight to Hell.
Excellent.
The Chinese are methodical analysts and produce long term strategies. To outsiders, China seems impossible and often self-defeating.
This piece clearly indicates their strengths.
And you can appreciate the fact that “a slice of chocolate cake” served with Tomahawk missiles is a pathetic foreign policy move to try to impress Pres. Xi.
The Chinese leadership is heavy with thinkers like this.
They may seem less sophisticated in ways, but they can think. A huge advantage over American leaders.
I don’t know when America will descend, but the Hegemon beast is facing dire circumstances. Consuming itself from the tail, the beast will soon hit vital organs.
Can you, or anyone explain the clearing house mechanism for Treasuries? By which mechanism could the US negate its obligations ?
How can a simpleton such as myself monitor how China is redeeming USdebt for realpurchases?
Dude, you need to sit down and realize how currency systems work. Note, I said currency and not money. There is a huge difference. Currency is a medium of exchange, while money has that property, but money is also a store of wealth; currency is not. There is a big difference between Federal Reserve Notes (FRN) currency and gold and/energy. Gold/energy is money and FRNs are just a currency.
Effectively every FRN in existence has a coupon. The FRN on paper is merely the manifestation of some debt somewhere else. Most of those debts are in eDollar form. It makes no difference as they were ALL borrowed into existence by somebody at some point in the past.
Without MORE borrowing in the future the interest owed on the debt that created today’s money can never be paid. Or, it can, but then there is inadequate remaining money to repay the principal; this is very simple math.
There used to be the petro-dollar recycling with KSA (GCC at large) – US (really the USSA – United Socialist States of America; NB, many say the USSR died and went away; I’ll argue, no, it just packed up and want to America) sends FRN clownbux to the oil (energy) based world, receives oil and trinkets that the American consumer loves (Walmart, etc.). The USSA has been able to sustain this because it has been exporting inflation to the world via FRNs. Due to a severe decline in cheap energy (energy that is easy to extract – think energy return on energy invested or EROEI), the petro-dollar scheme was failing in the late 1990’s/early 2000’s. Enter China via low interest rates set by the FED. Then we had the plastic/junk-dollar scheme with China and that lasted ’till the financial melt-down of 2007-2008 (China would recycle FRNs for treasuries). It’s important to note that currencies are a confidence scheme; nothing more. The rest of the world, including China basically said “enough with the treasury purchases.” Sure there was little purchases here and there, but the world had run out of the desire to hold treasuries, hence the math problem.
Now, back to the math problem. Printing money is the only way to solve this math…literally, it is. Janet (and other CB clowns) has to print the coupon because there is no credit growth that can pay it! Do you get that? If P is outstanding now, and P+I is owed one year from now, SOMEONE *must* borrow that extra I in order for it to EXIST in a debt-money system. So central banks have been taking up the slack since the financial crisis. How do you think their balance sheets have exploded? They literally have printed up I.
It is either that or FRNs snuff themselves out of existence and cease becoming money. Deflationists understand this “blackhole vortex” principle of deflation but they don’t understand that a scarce FRN will lose its ability to serve as money due to its scarcity. Excessively scarce things aren’t currencies.
*There is NOTHING that can SOLVE the problem of exponential growth in a FINITE world*
Can the USSA “negate it’s obligations” as you put it? No. There is no such thing as a free lunch. If the USSA decided to negate, there would be a tremendous loss of confidence in FRNs; people and countries would flee the FRNs, leaving nothing but a crater – see Venezuela.
Look at the TIC data. Everyone knows that you cannot just dump treasuries without shooting yourself in the foot. It has to be done somewhat over time.
But the problem, as stated above, is who will absorb the treasuries, when nobody likes holding FNS. Central banks can hold only so much with out loosing the con game. We are near the global saturation point. See this in the strength of the Russia-China double helix that Larchmonter445 has delineated many years ago – the global rejection of the dollar reserve currency; rejection of the unipolar world and ascendence to a multipolar world and a new monetary system.
Otherwise, I hope the Martians will buy up the debt – that’s our only hope now to keep the current system afloat.
I can tell you that it’s a mathematical certainty there will will a crash, orders of magnitude bigger that 2007-2009. I cannot tell you when.
The writing is on the wall, you just know how to read it. Old timers like myself saw the writing on the wall in the early 2000’s. Money was made on the recovery, not on the downfall. Same thing here. Don’t worry about the fall. Save your money/assets and deploy on the recovery.
Dude,
You didnt answer my qwestion.
Thanks, anyway
I am old enough to remember when Germany proudly came back after the disastrous war. One of my superiors sent me to buy 3000 Deutsche mark in a bank in the 60s. An enormous sum for me. Take a look at the TV series Heimat and see how Germany came back.
I was in Switzerland in 1971 when Nixon abandoned Bretton Woods. I came there with perhaps 140 dollars in my currency and survived for months by eating only once everyday. I remember sleeping in a barn and remember the Berglutli. I could handle poverty and my school German was preserved. A good deal that later brought income and affected my children.
I had some dollars and got almost nothing for them at the bank.
In 1973 or 1974 the oil tankers started moving around and stopped delivering. This led to rationing in some countries. I am not sure, but I think DDR (GDR) also suffered.
France got its gold, but the UK did not. There is a rumour London was promised something else.
I want to tell people that poor people have a capacity that rich people don´t have. My grandparents did the impossible in the 30s when there were no jobs and no income. They brought up four healthy children and they inspired me. Oh Lord, how great Thou art.
Thanks for your heartfelt comment.
Now we can understand why all the so called nationalist parties, so “patriotic” ( not so curiously now, the same which supported Trump ) and so many commenters/ authors here claim all day for the end of EU….Whom will be benefited from that after alll?……..Of course the US and its fiat dollar.
Re
” But why was he still hung? It was because he played a game between the U.S. and EU. After the euro was created in 1999, he announced that ***Iraq’s oil trade would be settled in euros.*** This angered the Americans, especially when many other countries followed suit. Russian President Putin, Iranian President Ahmadinejad, and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez all made the same announcement. How could the Americans accept this?”
Well, well, well, who’da thunk it.
I did, that’s who. And the reason for that is because I was copyedting a book by Immanual Wallerstein and he said this. Back in January of 2003. At the march in NYC in February I was intereviewed by Dutch students for their media project, and I got to say on-screen that the real reason for the coming war was that Saddam wanted to set up an oil exchange denominated in euros, and the USA was not going to let that happen. I have no idea what happened to the Dutch students and their video, but as soon as I read, in the ms. I was working on, Wallerstein’s analysis of the pressures in the “world-system” in the run-up to the otherwise inexplicable Iraq War I knew that had to be the correct explanation. Because no other explanations made any sense what-so-ever.
So it is very refreshing to see that Qiao agrees with me and Immanuel Wallerstein—even 14 years later . . . Better late than never!
Katherine
In fact, Globalresearch.ca reported on this fact at the time, so anyone familiar with the situation knew at the time that it was all about the fact that, after Saddam was initially sucked in to Kuwait, and was under sanctions that killed 500,000 kids, which Madeline Albright thinks is ‘worth it’. Whatever ‘it’ is (US hegemony). So Saddam finally gave the US the finger and switched to selling oil in Euros, and in fact made a 30% return as the Euro recovered.
It was his ‘arrogance’ at ditching the dollar that caused his hanging.
As for Afghanistan, Mike Ruppert, a diligent 911 researcher and Peter Dale Scott both pointed out that Afghanistan was the leader in opium production, which the Taliban shut down. Ruppert (and I think also Catherine Austin Fitts) pointed out that the drug business which is essentially a CIA operation, got cut off when the Taliban stopped the opium growing by 90%. That also threatened the US economy, according to Ruppert’s research, since that amounted to $500 billion a year in cash flow to US banks laundering drug money.
That was the main reason why the Taliban had to go, along with the fact that they had the audacity to choose a South American company to build a pipeline instead of Unocal of the USA.
So needless to say, US wars are not about human rights, or even terrorist attacks which are so often fabricated, it’s all about the Dollar and control of resources financially and ultimately military. But Saker readers already know that, though articles like this one spell out the details.
In my article Deflation in the Casino (http://tinyurl.com/zhobvlh) , I argued that the 1973 petrodollar replacement for the Bretton Woods agreement–making oil the basis for the $US– has run its course now that the diminished oil-export nation surplus liquidity is insufficient to provide liquidity to service the massive global debt. The loss of this increment of $US liquidity flow is crucial. The abandonment of the BW gold standard in 1971 marked the beginning of the end of the American century. The adoption of the petrodollar system and the emergence of industrial China after 150 years of western imperialist domination delayed the finale of the American century as China accumulated several trillion in $US denominated paper. The US dollar enjoyed a ¨dirty float¨: no nation could afford to operate without otherwise unredeemable $US reserves (Bernanke´s global savings glut?) that would allow them to transact international trade in that one reserve currency. In this casino the US was the house and no one could turn in their chips for anything but more of the same debauched chips.
On October 1 the Chinese yuan became an IMF Special Drawing Rights currency. In spite of China´s economic and banking excesses, note that China has
no external debt
massive industrial capacity
the most gold production and steadily increasing gold reserves
a One Belt One Road colossal intercontinental infrastructure project
a strategic military-industrial-raw material partner in Russia
a new swift (international payments transfer) system: the CIPS, swap arrangements around the world
new infrastructure development and foreign exchange emergency lending banks
the sixth most used trading currency
This could be China´s century. A monetary reset will upset all international geopolitical relations.
The world monetary system needs a governor on the creation of money-as-debt because excessive money-as debt creation has debauched currencies. Gold, the traditional governor on the global monetary system, has been deemed to be an anachronism largely because it has been more than a generation since any currency was redeemable in gold. The major decision makers have been schooled in a fiat system and have no experience with any other system and no incentives to curb monetary excesses. It´s the only system they know. In hindsight, those countries that increase their physical gold reserves will be deemed to have made obvious choices in an environment ripe for a reset, but now look anachronistic.
When will the reset occur and when will gold be reintegrated into the global monetary system? Not before nations begin steadily reducing the US dollar component of their national monetary reserves–now approximately 60%– well below 60% and not before the proportion of world trade conducted in the US dollar–now approximately 43%– falls significantly below 40% of the total amount of currencies used in trade. When these trends are irreversible, economic confidence in the current fiat system will erode because capital flows to where its owners deem it is safest. Loss of that confidence will trigger the reset.
Links for the above comment excerpt from Deflation in the Casino are here: https://www.marketslant.com/articles/gold-and-global-monetary-reset
For more of this type of analysis, check out my blog Inquiramus .
You’re on to something, but confused about the difference between money and currency, and the nature of currency in a credit(debt)-based system, like we have today (the USSA reserve currency a.k.a US dollar or FRNs or clownbux…).
It’s easy – I’ll spell it out for you.
Money today is debt.
Debt has a coupon.
That system is represented as P + I. I does not presently exist, only P does. P is the aggregate credit base. I is owed in the future.
Ergo, FUTURE P must be = present P + I. QED, debt must grow. That is why the answer is always more debt.
Liquidity is an entirely different animal.
Get this straight and you blog/article might be interesting…
Sorry, should be “currency today is debt”, not “money today is debt.”
From everything I’ve read, the Chinese will not put the RMB as the new global currency, a reserve currency. They want a basket of currencies, perhaps a new regime basket.
Even in this article, Qiao Liang indicates the RMB as a regional currency.
The Chinese want to be #1 someday (30-50 years from now), but they don’t want to be on the top. They prefer being within a group or at worst, one of two. But groups are better.
So imagine a cluster of C-R-USA-J-I-Ir-B in ten years or so. I leave out all or any of Europe, because I don’t see that they have a future. Ideology will crush their societies and if terrorism isn’t soon liquidated, they will lose their civilization.
Meanwhile, Eurasia is forming economic ties among its own nations. Four great civilizations (China, Russia, India and Persia) could be the gyroscope for the globe’s navigation when the Hegemon loses power. Unfortunately, it’s still a world of men as helmsman and we can’t point to too many of them as wise. We have Putin and Xi and that’s been enough to stop the macro containment. In a year or two, we’ll see if there is a true weakening and rollback of the Hegemon. The initiative is always with the predator.
Larchmonter
The future of global currency appears to be the SDR, the Special Drawing Right of the IMF, the International Monetary Fund. This is not a secret, but is discussed somewhat openly as a real possibility in currency circles.
No country ever again wants to be the global reserve currency. The British did it, the US did it, but it puts a strain on a nation unless it has the plunder of empire continually coming in to balance all that currency held offshore.
China wants no more than to be one of the basket of currencies that make up the SDR – which it is today, along with the USD. But China’s IMF voting rights have increased recently, and I think (I don’t study this, just casual reading) has yet to overpower the US voting right in the IMF, but is approaching this, and presumably is one Chinese goal. So China will be top dog in a basket of currencies.
James Rickards has said, by the way, that when the SDR becomes the global reserve currency, there’s something like an extra $100 Trillion of brand new liquidity that can enter the global economy over time – enough to soak up a lot of the exposure of the derivatives, and keep the asset-accumulation game going for more decades. So it may well be that things don’t just “crash” but simply get renegotiated.
The exchange value of the US Dollar will go down over time, against other currencies, notably the Yuan (and the Ruble).
All the above is pretty mainstream – see some of Max Keiser’s shows or guests, read the article above, and Alasdair Macleod as cited in the first comment here, etc…
But to speculate next, in my own private thinking – China and Russia are accumulating gold on a global scale as power transfers to the east. This is how the global powers, both national and private, account for their power, through gold held in national reserves and private vaults. It is said to be like a private game, where gold by the ton is the respect paid to each power. Without gold, you are nothing. My impression is that there’s way more private power than national, and I’m not sure where the US sits on that spectrum, but I’m pretty sure China sits at the national end. (Russia, there are 2 schools of thought about.) I don’t know if power comes because you accumulate gold, or if gold transfers to reflect your physical power (i.e. military, energy security, geopolitical heft, etc.) They don’t tell me these things, and I don’t know anyone to ask ;)
You might find this article to be of interest.
http://www.voltairenet.org/article159686.html
You were correct, I find it of great interest. Thank you. With 71 footnotes, this is a large article, and I’m still reading it.
It’s a Who’s Who and What’s What of the banker’s eternal ambition to have one market only, containing all of humanity, just sufficiently alive to get up every day past the boot in its face, to work the bounty of creation (all spoken for), to pay compound interest, forever.
And its eternal enemy is sovereign money.
Well said. By “Sovereign money” are you referring to the concepts of Modern Monetary Theory? They appear to propose control of the money supply by the Sovereign State instead of the privately held central banking system. What puzzles me about the MMT people is they seem to hold that the Federal Reserve System is currently part of the US government and hence unlimited money can already be created without penalty. However, the FED, as part of the BIS system, is not a government entity. The answer would be for the US government to nationalize the Federal Reserve System. Government spending would then entail no deficit and no debt. I haven’t exactly heard them express this however, which puzzles me.
I am also quite interested in the Soviet financial and banking system. As far as I know, the creation of Rubles by the former Gosbank was done according to Sovereign money theory. Unfortunately, my knowledge of that field is weak and it’s very difficult to find references.
This is a great quote from the article:
“Indeed, the current “solutions” being proposed to the global financial crisis benefit those that caused the crisis over those that are poised to suffer the most as a result of the crisis: the disappearing middle classes, the world’s dispossessed, poor, indebted people. The proposed solutions to this crisis represent the manifestations and actualization of the ultimate generational goals of the global elite; and thus, represent the least favourable conditions for the vast majority of the world’s people.
It is imperative that the world’s people throw their weight against these “solutions” and usher in a new era of world order, one of the People’s World Order; with the solution lying in local governance and local economies, so that the people have greater roles in determining the future and structure of their own political-economy, and thus, their own society. With this alternative of localized political economies, in conjunction with an unprecedented global population and international democratization of communication through the internet, we have the means and possibility before us to forge the most diverse manifestation of cultures and societies that humanity has ever known.
The answer lies in the individual’s internalization of human power and destination, and a rejection of the externalization of power and human destiny to a global authority of which all but a select few people have access to. To internalize human power and destiny is to realize the gift of a human mind, which has the ability to engage in thought beyond the material, such as food and shelter, and venture into the realm of the conceptual. Each individual possesses – within themselves – the ability to think critically about themselves and their own life; now is the time to utilize this ability with the aim of internalizing the concepts and questions of human power and destiny: Why are we here? Where are we going? Where should we be going? How do we get there?
The supposed answers to these questions are offered to us by a tiny global elite who fear the repercussions of what would take place if the people of the world were to begin to answer these questions themselves. I do not know the answers to these questions, but I do know that the answers lie in the human mind and spirit, that which has overcome and will continue to overcome the greatest of challenges to humanity, and will, without doubt, triumph over the New World Order.”
[Afghanistan war] to rebuild the global investors’ confidence. After the first cruise missiles exploded in Kabul, the Dow Jones index jumped up 600 points in one day. The capital that left the U.S. started to flow back. By the end of 2001, US$400 billion came back to the U.S.
I don’t follow this bit. Why should an attack on Afghanistan, of all places, improve investor confidence in the attacker?
Q: Why Afghanistan?
A: Grenada and Panama had already been “done”….
Or expressed another way – the US needed a defenceless patsy. The article argues they need a “war- quick!” Afghanistan offered a number of “boxes” to tick.
1/ it could not really defend itself (ok, hindsight gives perfect vision! and 15 years later US is still there and failing…..,but in 99-01, Afghanistan looked like an easy mark).
2/ Afghanistan is a globally strategic “piece” on Brzezinski’s “grand chessboard”
3/ the Taliban had pretty much annihilated the opium trade. This had cut deeply into the CIA profits. Yes. Really, not all conspiracies are just “theories”…..
4/ allow access to the Caspian Sea and oil and gas reserves and pipelines
5/ continue to poke at Russia’s soft, and at that time mostly (or poorly) defended underbelly.
That’s just a few reasons… As an entree.
Afghanistan just “got lucky” _ it was sitting there all undefended, right when the US needed to “kick some ass” and could not risk having a confrontation with anyone it *thought* could defend itself.
But the US is not a great student of history! and those tribal afghans have proved once again that Afghanistan is where “empires go to die” ….
Simply because the system works so…
Your “imagination” of “reality” is insufficient. This isn’t meant as offense or to lecture you. I’m simply straight forward… I suppose, that the cause of your question is the meaning which you attribute to the term “investor”. Maybe you think of an “investor” in schoolbook terms.
But think in this scheme of an investor as a “financial entity connected to Rothschild”. Then it’s much easier to understand, why a war is rewarded.
Always when you hear the term “markets”, you should think of the above said:
“The markets are nervous…”
“The markets reacted to this or that political decision with this or that…”
“The markets” are a conglomerate of central banks, investment banks, hedge funds, offshore centres and other international financial institutions and agencies, who constitute a network and who coordinate their steps.
Already Adam Smith spoke about a “hidden hand”, “the mysterious forces of free market”, which will ensure, that things in economy will play out like in school books.
Pfff…
It’s the financial Oligarchy…
On one hand,all this is unfortunately true. On the other hand,PRC,Russia and other nations can be quite content that they have such short-sighted adversary. While it is true that dollar printing is prolonging Empire,they dont use this unique possibility to really use it in a way to be a strong country. They are ruining its industry,real economy and middle class and rotting from within. And that is not sustainible. After all,there is no point to be Empire,that is old concept that cannot work indefinitely. Its much better to focus on its own society,to make itself better and be an example to others. In long term relations, its better strategy. And that is exactly what China is doing. And some other countries,too.
This article adds further confirmation to what other analysts have been suggesting about US Dollar Imperialism as a fundamental driver of America’s geopolitical machinations and financial system…
Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire
http://michael-hudson.com/books/super-imperialism-the-economic-strategy-of-american-empire/
Defending Dollar Imperialism
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/01/defending-dollar-imperialism/
Chaos And Hegemony – How US Dollar Imperialism Dominates The World
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-04-14/chaos-and-hegemony-how-us-dollar-imperialism-dominates-world#.
And ultimately, the Dollar is an important factor in American wars of aggression like the invasion of Iraq or the attack on Libya:
The Invasion of Iraq: Dollar vs Euro
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Iraq/Iraq_dollar_vs_euro.html
Revisited – The Real Reasons for the Upcoming War With Iraq:
http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/RRiraqWar.html
Gaddafi Gold-for-oil, Dollar-doom Plans Behind Libya ‘Mission’?
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article28048.htm
http://rt.com/news/economy-oil-gold-libya/
The Libyan War, American Power and the Decline of the Petrodollar System
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24542
Petrodollar Warfare: Oil, Iraq and the Future of the Dollar
https://www.raisethehammer.org/article/235/