Dollar Hegemony in the Empire of the Damned
Global Research, September 26, 2012
Many
commentators and economists wonder if the US is able to turn its ailing economy
around. The reality is that it is bankrupt. However, as long as the dollar
remains the world currency, the US can continue to pay its bills by simply
printing more money. But once the world no longer accepts the dollar as world
reserve currency, the US will no longer be able to continue to pay its way or to
fund its wars by relying on what would then be a relatively valueless paper
currency.
And the US realises this. Today, more than 60 per cent of all foreign
currency reserves in the world are in US dollars, and the US will attempt to
prevent countries moving off the dollar by any means possible. It seems
compelled to do this simply because its economic infrastructure seems too weak
and US corporate cartels will do anything to prevent policies that eat into
their profits or serve to curtail political influence. They serve their own
interests, not any notional ‘national interest’.
Paul Graig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury, notes that
much of the most productive part of the US economy has been moved offshore in
order to increase corporate profits. By doing so, the US has lost critical
supply chains, industrial infrastructure, and the knowledge of skilled workers.
According to Roberts, the US could bring its corporations back to America by
taxing their profits abroad and could also resort to protective tariffs, but
such moves would be contrary to the material interests of the ruling oligarchy
of private interests, which hold so much sway over US politics.
So, with no solution to the crisis in site, the US is compelled to expand its
predatory capitalism into foreign markets such as India and to wage imperialist
wars to maintain global allegiance to the dollar and US hegemony. And this is
exactly what we are seeing today as the US strategy for global supremacy is
played out.
Over the past two decades, the US has extended its influence throughout
Eastern Europe, many of the former Soviet states in central Asia and, among
other places, in the former Yugoslavia, Libya, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Syria
and Pakistan. But with each passing year and each new conflict, the US has been
drawing closer and closer to direct confrontation with Russia and China,
particularly as it enters their backyards in Asia and as China continues to
emerge as a serious global power.
Both countries are holding firm over Syria. Syria plays host to Russia’s only
naval base outside of the former USSR, and Russia and China know that if the US
and its proxies topple the Assad government, Tehran becomes a much easier
proposition. Ideally, the US would like to install compliant regimes in Moscow
and Beijing and exploiting political and ethnic divisions in the border regions
of Russia and China would be that much easier if Iran fell to US interests.
A global US strategy is already in force to undermine China’s growth and
influence, part of which was the main reason for setting up AFRICOM: US Africa
Command with responsibility for military operations and relations across Africa.
But China is not without influence, and its actions are serving to weaken the
hegemony of the US dollar, thereby striking at a key nerve of US power.
China has been implementing bilateral trade agreements with a number of
countries, whereby trade is no longer conducted in dollars, but in local
currencies. Over the past few years,China and other emerging powers such as
Russia have been making agreements to move away from the US dollar in
international trade. The BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China,South Africa) also
plan to start using their own currencies when trading with each other. Russia
and China have been using their own national currencies when trading with
each other for more than a year.
A report from Africa’s largest bank, Standard Bank, recently stated:
“We expect at least $100 billion (about R768 billion) in Sino-African
trade – more than the total bilateral trade between China and
Africa in 2010 – to be settled in the renminbi by
2015.”
Under Saddam, Iraq was not using the dollar as the base currency for oil
transactions, neither is Iran right now. Even Libya’s Muammar Gadhaffi was
talking about using a gold backed dinar as the reserve currency for parts of
Africa. Look what happened to Libya and Iraq as a result.
In 2000, Iraq converted all its oil transactions to euros. When U.S. invaded
Iraq in 2003, it returned oil sales from the euro to the dollar. Little surprise
then that we are currently watching the US attempt to remove the Iranian regime
via sanctions, destabilization, intimidation and the threat of all out war.
In the meantime, though, Iran is looking east to China, Pakistan and central
Asia in order to counteract the effects of US sanctions and develop its economy
and boost trade. In order to sustain its empire, US aggression is effectively
pushing the world into different camps and a new cold war that could well turn
into a nuclear conflict given that Russia, China and Pakistan all have nuclear
weapons.
The US economy appears to be in terminal decline. The only way to prop it up
is by lop-sided trade agreements or by waging war to secure additional markets
and resources and to ensure the dollar remains the world reserve currency.
Humankind is currently facing a number of serious problems. But, arguably, an
empire in decline armed to the teeth with both conventional and nuclear weapons
and trapped in a cycle of endless war in what must surely be a futile attempt to
stave off ruin is the most serious issue of all.
Originally from the northwest of England, Colin Todhunter
has spent many years in India. He has written extensively for the
Deccan Herald (the Bangalore-based broadsheet), New Indian Express and Morning
Star (Britain). His articles have also appeared in various other publications.
His East by Northwest website is at http://colintodhunter.blogspot.com
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