-- Posted Friday, 2 January 2009 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
By Eric Pratt
We are forced to labor under several apparent falsehoods that are nonetheless enshrined in our collective first-world political imagination. Foremost among them is that the rule of law prevails over the law of the jungle, where the mightiest governs by virtue of brute strength.
The fact is that the rule of law only succeeds because the arbiters of the law, the justice system, have at their disposal the greatest collective threat of violence within the political boundaries of the country. Obey the law, or else.
Similarly, the prevalence of U.S. policy around the world in all matters military and economic is a reflection of the threat of violence represented by the nation’s armed forces. While free speech and dissent are encouraged superficially (both domestically and internationally), American foreign policy decisions are implemented unilaterally and independent of any serious consultative process.
George Bush made it clear during the first “G20” summit in Washington on November 14th this year.
"Our nations agree that we must make the financial markets more transparent and accountable," he said, soon after the summit drew to a close. "We agree that we need to improve our regulation and to ensure that markets, firms, and financial products are subject to proper regulation and oversight."
Earlier in the day, Bush had said that any solution to the financial crisis had to be an “American solution”. His comments were mostly ignored, however, since his imminent retirement rendered them irrelevant anyway.
Its been an interesting year, to put it mildly. Commodities prices and stocks have all discovered new lows. Gold has demonstrated consistently its reliability as a store of value. Less than a year after oil prices set all time record highs, it’s trading at 2004 price levels.
Our governments and their academic economists refuse to acknowledge the relationship between economic volatility and excess systemic capitalization, clinging desperately instead to the belief that the secret to never-ending growth is non-stop expansion of money supply.
Over-leveraging, relaxation of credit risk evaluation, and inflated demand for commodities is the inevitable result of such policy, resulting in ever-deepening recessions and wildly exuberant expansion phases.
But what if all this apparent mishandling of fiscal policy isn’t as ham fisted as it appears? What if the financial meltdown, initially triggered by rumors of Bear Stearns insolvency, was in fact a strategic move to trip the global economy into a recessive phase intentionally?
If you are one of the happy shiny people who believes that what is reported on CNN and what is said by government spokespeople is the unassailable truth, you might as well be on your merry way.
I’m not going to try to identify the “who” behind this grand strategy. They are the occupants of the ivory towers whose elevators we only see from the lobby. They are the world’s biggest shareholders – not of any single company. They remain invisible through ownership positions in holding companies of less than 10%, serving the twin objectives of diversity and anonymity. The holding companies are private, and themselves held by other larger private holding companies and trusts.
These are the world’s richest who don’t show up on the Forbes 100 list of the world’s richest. They are elite. They are invisible.
Since they want to stay elite and have the ability to purchase the confidence of governments, they cannot be identified through even the most determined investigative reporter. Like massive distant stars in the galaxy, their existence is inferred through their influence on closer celestial bodies.
Consider this: The overcapitalization of the economy provided the opportunity not only for Wall Street top tier banks to max out on fee flows from amplified global lending and the associated derivatives – it also took the commodity prices of its political rivals – Venezuela, Russia and Iran – into the stratosphere. With oil at $147 a barrel, these three countries were an increasingly sharp thorn in the side of U.S. foreign policy.
Why, Russia and Venezuela even engaged in joint military exercises in the Caribbean and Atlantic this month, resulting in an accord signed by the two countries pledging cooperation in nuclear energy and oil exploration.
If that doesn’t have the Pentagon Hawks twitching, they must be dead or asleep.
Nothing is more dangerous to the United States than strong military rivals sharing its hemisphere, and that fact combined with the high prices at U.S. pumps created plenty of incentive for the econo-political elite to pull the plug on the global feeding frenzy.
Whether you believe in its intent or not, the return of 2004 oil price levels has undermined the ability of those nations to finance new military equipment. Evidence of the struggle is visible in both countries.
In Venezuela, Chavez made it clear that he was going to turn his attention to nationalizing gold mines. Last week, his invitation to foreign oil companies to resume exploration within his country’s borders was met with widespread contempt. Who is going to invest billions only to have the resulting asset nationalized?
In Russia, Gazprom (OTC BB: OGZPY), the country’s state-owned and run oil and gas behemoth has lost 76 percent of its value since the beginning of the year as a result of low oil prices and absence of capital. That has to be putting a dent in the finances of the Russian war machine.
The anti-American saber rattling can still be heard, but it sounds more like the tinkling of teaspoons now.
Now lets talk about China.
The Council on Foreign Relations (“CFR”) issued a report in September 2008 called “Sovereign Wealth and Sovereign Power”. One section of the report is entitled “Foreign Demand for U.S. Debt: Strategic Asset or Achilles Heel?”
The argument herein is that greater financial interdependency between China and the United States breeds mutual interests and fosters cooperation. But it also cautions, “The U.S. Treasury relies on the confidence of the Chinese public in China’s state banks, their willingness to buy the People’s Bank of China’s (PBoC) sterilization bills, and the willingness of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange to add to its holdings of U.S. debt.”
The United States overlooks the human rights abuses in China that it would not tolerate within its own borders because its not in a position to dictate to China. In fact, the United States has no choice to be nice to China, because if China decides to stop investing in U.S. Treasuries, the jig is up. That would be step 1 on the path to U.S. Bankruptcy.
The CFR report compares the U.S. position to that of Britain in the 1950s:
“The United States is militarily far stronger than Britain was in the 1950s— and unlike Britain, it is not committed to maintaining the dollar’s external value. However, in some ways the United States’ current financial position is more precarious than Britain’s position in the 1950s. While Britain ran a small current account surplus in 1956, the United States ran a $750 billion current account deficit in 2007—5.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). Britain’s main source of financing was a close political ally. The United States’ main sources of financing are not allies. Without financing from China, Russia, and the Gulf states, the dollar would fall sharply, U.S. interest rates would rise, and the U.S. government would find it far more difficult to sustain its global role at an acceptable domestic cost.”
War with China is not a viable option. Defaulting on the debt is. When the international community finally bands together to demand a revaluation of the U.S. dollar, China will have no choice but to take the hit and write down its U.S. book accordingly. The effect on the Yuan’s purchasing power domestically could be negatively impacted, catalyzing the already fizzing cauldron of civil unrest.
To the United States, it would be equivalent to “checkmate”. The last remaining major communist superpower might be forced the rest of the way into democracy, the dollar strengthened by revaluation, and repositioned as the reserve currency for the next hundred years.
Just another angle on the Crime of the Century. Learn more at www.CrimeoftheCenturyMovie.com
-- Posted Friday, 2 January 2009 | Digg This Article
| Source: GoldSeek.com