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Current
Cooperatives Activist
Women Global
Food Resources
Economic Consequences Of Iraq Occupation
By Garda Ghista
Introduction
The U.S. real economy is in virtual shambles. It is the most debt-ridden
country in the world, with every American having an average debt of
$12,000. Its position is worse than that of Indonesia when it imploded
in 1998, and it is even worse than that of Argentina. In February and
March of 2003 another half a million Americans were laid off from their
jobs. US has a record trade deficit of nearly 5% of GDP, a $6.3 trillion
dollar deficit (55% of GDP which is $9 trillion) and is looking at
annual budget deficits in the hundreds of billions. There is massive
debt manipulation, unaffordable tax cuts, massive current account
deficits, trade deficits, corporate accounting fraud running into
billions, unsustainable credit expansion, and near zero personal savings.
The dollar is surviving all this economic turmoil only because it is the
international fiat currency (i.e.“petro dollar”) for global oil
transactions. The US prints billions of these fiat petro-dollars to be
used by other countries when purchasing oil from OPEC and other
producers. These dollars are then recycled back into the US via Treasury
Bills or other assets such as US stocks, real estate, etc. As W. Clark
says in his article “The Real but Unspoken Reasons for the Iraq War”,
“World trade is now a game in which the US produces dollars and the rest
of the world produces things that dollars can buy. The world’s
interlinked economies no longer trade to capture a comparative advantage;
they compete in exports to capture needed dollars to service
dollar-denominated foreign debts and to accumulate dollar reserves to
sustain the exchange value of their domestic currencies. To prevent
speculative and manipulative attacks on their currencies, the world’s
central banks must acquire and hold dollar reserves in corresponding
amounts to their currencies in circulation. The higher the market
pressure to devalue a particular currency, the more dollar reserves its
central bank must hold. This creates a built-in support for a strong
dollar that in turn forces the world’s central banks to acquire and hold
more dollar reserves, making it stronger.”
“This phenomenon is known as dollar hegemony, which is created by the
geo-politically constructed peculiarity that critical commodities, most
notably oil, are denominated in dollars. Everyone accepts dollars
because dollars can buy oil. The recycling of petro-dollar is the price
that the US has extracted from oil-producing countries for US tolerance
of the oil-exporting cartel since 1973.”
Clark goes on to say that those dollar reserves must be invested in US
assets, so as to create a capital-accounts surplus for the US economy.
Hence even today the US stock valuation is at a 25-year high and trading
is at a 56% premium. When oil is denominated in dollars and the dollar
is the fiat currency, then basically the US owns the world’s oil for
free. US has had such an agreement with Saudi Arabia for the past 30
years. This strategy has allowed the Federal Reserve to create a massive
debt and credit expansion which is sustainable only as long as (1)
countries continue to buy oil for their survival, and (2) the fiat
reserve currency for global oil transactions remains the dollar. This
second point is what is becoming very tricky for the US. The euro has
been growing in strength. In December 2002 ten more countries agreed to
become members of the Euro-zone. When this goes into effect in May 2004
it will result in an aggregate GDP of $9.6 trillion and 450 million
people for the Euro-zone. This will mean an oil consuming/purchasing
population 33% larger than the US. More than half of OPEC oil will be
sold to the EU as of mid-2004. This is a real economic threat to the US
economy, which has an aggregate GDP of $10.5 trillion and 280 million
people. One year ago in April 2002 in Spain, the Head of OPEC’s market
analysis department talked about switching from the dollar to the euro
as the fiat currency. While this fact has been frequently published in
European media, it is completely suppressed in the American media. In
addition, EU members do more trade with OPEC members than the US does.
Hence there are compelling reasons to make the euro the fiat currency
for global trading. Britain and Norway have not yet joined the EU. If
they do, it can certainly shift the balance of economic power to the
euro, especially as these two countries have the largest oil reserves in
Europe. A major argument hitherto for keeping the fiat currency in the
dollar has been that US is such a big importer of oil. However, the
Euro-zone –all EU members combined – is an even larger importer of oil
and petroleum products than US. The trading between the Euro-zone and
OPEC countries is large, with 45% of imports of OPEC MCs (member
countries) coming from the Euro-zone, and in reverse the OPEC MCs are
the main suppliers of oil and crude oil products to the Euro-zone. It
would appear a natural stream of events for the fiat currency to change
to the euro.
Benefit Cost
Why was the U.S. government so desperate to go to war? Was it about
bringing democracy to Iraq? Was it about stamping out terrorism? Or was
it about oil? According to journalist and commentator Peter Arnett, the
real reason for the desperate U.S. attack on Iraq was simply economic
hegemony. Clearly it was desperate because Bush ignored international
law, he ignored the UN Security Council, the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, NATO, the Geneva Convention, and he ignored the definition
of “aggression” established by the U.N. It took the United Nations body
more than thirty years to finally agree on a definition of aggression.
The one country delaying that agreement year after year was the U.S.
government. Now we can understand why. The U.S. government wanted the
freedom to conquer other countries any time in order to extend its
capitalist economic empire. Not only will US suffer from economic
retribution, it will suffer from increased terrorism on its own soil as
well. The US is becoming a ‘rogue’ superpower that does not hesitate to
slaughter several hundred thousand Iraqi civilians as collateral damage
in order to maintain global economic hegemony.
Today the issue is not about political colonization of third world
countries. It is about economic colonization. The Iraq war is about
economics and economic domination. As Professor Carl Simkonis of
Northern Kentucky University says, just follow the money trail and it
will give the answers. This war is about the U.S. fighting head on with
Europe to become the world’s economic leader. Bush trotted out a litany
of lies, innuendoes and fraudulent excuses and spent billions of dollars
in bribe money to buy UN votes, but still failed to get the requisite
majority to approve his brutal “shock and awe” attack on Iraq. His
attack puts him in violation of every human rights resolution on record,
and justice demands that he be put on trial at the International
Criminal Court for crimes against humanity!
It is a likely supposition that the U.S. attacked Iraq primarily to
retain the U.S. dollar as the global fiat currency. In 1971 when the US
stopped exchanging dollars for gold, it forced the whole world to use
the US dollar as the world currency. According to Rachel Douglas, “Since
the dollar supply is 80% created against US government bonds, this means
that anybody using the dollar is effectively financing the US budget
free of charge. Therefore the Americans can wage expensive wars and
terrorize the whole world; and everybody who holds or uses the dollar is
paying for these ‘services’”. Also according to Douglas, at present only
four percent of the dollars in circulation are backed by US gold and
currency reserves. If there is a massive dumping of dollars, it could
launch the collapse of the dollar-based global financial and monetary
system, heralding the end of US economic dominance. The US, currently in
debt to the rest of the world to the tune of $30 trillion, would face
bankruptcy, which would be also disastrous for all other countries
holding their reserves in dollars. It is hence critical for the US
government to stall nations’ conversion to the euro for as long as
possible. If Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries decide to switch to
the euro, it would bankrupt the American economy and thus prevent it
from attacking the many other countries it is daily threatening. Hence,
we may likely see the U.S. take revenge by military attack on those
countries in the name of fighting terrorism, but in reality to keep the
dollar as the fiat currency.
In 1999 Iraq broke ranks and began trading oil in euros (primarily with
France and Germany) and made big profits. Iran took note and so did
Venezuela, the fourth largest oil producer in the world. Venezuela has
already taken steps to lessen its dependence on the dollar by bartering
oil with several neighboring countries, including Cuba. Russia is also
bumping up oil production with Europe and trading in euros instead of
dollars. If this continues, it would make the euro the dominant legal
tender in the world. Hence the U.S. had no choice but to attack Iraq, as
otherwise the U.S. dollar would have been in serious jeopardy. With the
U.S. conquest of Iraq, the EU euro will suffer a temporary setback and
the U.S. economic position may last a bit longer. By conquering Iraq,
the US government intends not just to restore Iraq to trading oil in US
dollars, but to also send a clear message to any other country as to
what will happen if they stop trading in the dollar. By conquering Iraq
the US gains control of the second largest oil reserves in the world, as
well as a solid military base in a now secular state to allow the US to
control the entire Middle East oil reserves.
Russian economist and political figure Sergei Glazyev vigorously opposed
the US attack on Iraq. He rejected the idea of ‘cheap oil’ as being the
only reason for the war. He said the more fundamental reason was the
crisis in the global financial system and the competition between the
dollar and the euro. Up until the attack, Russia was ready to trade with
Europe in euros and conduct the rest of its trading in local currencies.
This would provide real benefit to the fragile Russian economy. Glazyev
further said that countries trading in dollars are essentially financing
this illegal occupation of Iraq, and if they do not support it, then
those countries should seriously consider changing to a new world
monetary system. He said that the Bush regime is not really interested
in lowering oil prices because it would reduce the personal profits of
the Bush family and his entire regime, many of who have strong financial
ties to the petroleum industry. Presently the marginal cost of
consumption of oil is $40 per barrel. If oil prices rise above this, the
economy will suffer, as losses will begin to surpass revenues and
production will shut down.
The chief aim of the US in attacking Iraq was economic – to destroy the
power of the euro and to gain control of the major oil reserves, thereby
solidifying the hegemony of the US dollar. According to Peter Arnett,
the cost of the Iraq war will not be heavy. What would have a heavy cost
for the U.S. is losing the US dollar as legal tender of world trade.
Australia does substantial trading with US and hence it is also in their
interest to retain the dollar as legal tender. Britain has not yet
adopted the euro. Britain may even decide to remain with US economically
and withdraw from joining the EU. There is still the alternative for the
EU that in view of the US conquest, European countries move into the
area of alternative energy technologies so as to lessen their dependence
on oil. This would give them the opportunity to trade with these
technologies in euros and would again give them the chance to shift the
world trade balance.
Global economic hegemony means that the axis-of-evil called
Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld will never be satisfied with the spoils of Iraq.
Already in the first week of April, Rumsfeld has been on TV talking
about narco-terrorism in South America, and said that the US will not
tolerate this because those narco-terrorists are aiding and abetting the
‘other’ terrorists in the Middle East. He declared that US would have to
interfere and take action against these narco-terrorists. On April 25,
2003 on C-Span, Robert Novak of the Chicago Sun Times talked about the
need to combat terrorism in Columbia and other countries in Latin
America. Columbia is the eighth largest oil producer in the world.
Americans and the world should expect to see this occupation of Iraq
grow to become World War IV, with US attacking every country that dares
to trade oil in any currency other than the US dollar. This is American
democracy abroad!
Explicit Cost
On September 16 the Wall Street Journal reported that Bush’s chief
economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey, estimated an attack on Iraq would
cost $100-200 billion. The House Budget Committee Democratic Staff
analyzed Lindsey’s estimate and found it accurate. Lindsey’s projected
budget included the cost of the initial attack, the prolonged occupation
of Iraq by U.S. (up to six months), inducements (also called bribes) to
attract allies through foreign assistance or loan forgiveness, the
impact on US economy due to higher oil prices, and humanitarian
assistance. Desert Storm was used as a basis for these estimates.
However, there is a big difference between the two scenarios. In the
Gulf War, other nations paid the costs. In this attack the US will have
to foot the bill. According to the report summary by the House Budget
Committee, (1) the military action in Iraq will be far more costly today
than it was during Desert Storm due to lack of other nations’
contributions, (2) if a force of more than 250,000 military personnel is
required, costs could spiral significantly; (3) if the US military force
ends up staying in Iraq for months or years, this will drive up costs
considerably, to more than $300 billion; (4) humanitarian assistance to
refugees, reconstruction assistance, foreign assistance to get
cooperation for US military action, and interest costs due to increased
borrowing to finance these other costs – may become huge.
According to Keynesian economics, when there is a downward spiral or
economic recession moving to depression, the government can step in and
halt the process by one of three ways: by reducing taxes, by spending
money on public service projects , or by going to war. Going to war is a
way to stimulate the economy. It is one way government can spend
billions of dollars. If government consumption goes up, the GDP should
go up too. It remains to be seen in the coming months whether the GDP
will really go up. Suppose we witness that despite the Iraq war and
continued occupation of Iraq, the US economy continues to crumble
unabated. Would it mean that Keynesian economic theory does not work all
of the time, but only some of the time? We need to consider why this
time his theory may not work.
In recent months when major airlines companies in US faced bankruptcy
they laid off about 450,000 employees. The US government stepped in and
gave the airline companies a gift of $25 billion to get back on their
economic feet. The intent of giving that money was to enable the
airlines to rehire most or all of the laid-off employees. However, the
airlines did not do that. Instead, they used that $25 billion to award
huge 33% salary increases to the company CEOs. It means they did not put
money back into the system. The consequence of this action as we can see
today is that those same airlines are again facing bankruptcy and this
time the government is not going to bail them out. Similarly, we have
around $80 billion that Congress has approved for the Pentagon to pay
for the attack on Iraq. What is going to happen to that money, and to
future monies of say $300 billion and more that will also be awarded
directly to the Pentagon for its long-term occupation and reconstruction
(aka oil pipelines) of Iraq or even for expanding the war to other
countries? We already know, for example, that $4 billion went to pay
Turkey just for permission to fly over their airspace. This use of the
money will not lead to production and jobs in America. If our economy
continues to slide, it would either mean that Keynesian economics
doesn’t work all the time, or it would mean that the $100-$300 billion
never got funneled back into the economy via Pentagon purchases of goods
and services. Rather it could mean that the money or a large portion of
it was gobbled up by Pentagon CEOs, exactly as what happened with the
airlines. It would make for a logical explanation of why the U.S.
economy does not recover any time in the near future.
Keynes said, it is better to be vaguely right than precisely wrong.
However, it is impossible tbe even vaguely right regarding the costs of
the attack and occupation of Iraq. It depends upon the impact of the oil
market, the macroeconomic impacts on the U.S. economy, the aftermath of
hostilities in Iraq and neighboring countries. It also depends upon the
duration of US occupation, the extent of civilian casualties, the
potential for unconventional (guerilla) warfare, and the spread of war
outside Iraq. There may be terrorist attacks around the world, heavy
prolonged occupation costs, reconstruction costs, and costly
humanitarian assistance. If the US occupies Iraq for an extended period
– anywhere from seven years (Japan) to fifty years (South Korea), the
costs will run into more than $500 billion. Present estimates suggest
occupation of longer than a decade.
Implicit Cost
Perhaps the highest implicit cost of the brutal attack on Iraq is that
the hatred of Muslims worldwide along with many other people for America
will increase to the nth power. As months pass, it will become crystal
clear to the entire world that US went to Iraq not for WMD (weapons of
mass destruction) but solely for oil and to maintain global economic
hegemony. U.S. soldiers allowed the Baghdad museum to be destroyed and
looted , and the entire Iraqi government structures to be bombed or
burned (except the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Oil). They
cut off water and electricity to Baghdad and Basra, and even after
taking Baghdad were in no hurry to restore something as fundamental as
water to the civilian population, causing unnecessary untold suffering.
There is no way that the world will soon forget the brutal atrocity of
the U.S. attack on Iraq. There is no way the world will forget the
calculated destruction of all government ministries. The world will not
forget the pre-planned destruction of the Iraqi National Library housing
more than one million books and archives. The world will not forget the
US calculated destruction of the Iraqi universities – as part of a
larger plan to destroy the entire culture and identity of this ancient
Euphrates civilization. The clear plan of US is to reduce Iraq to a
nation of slaves, with no history, no dignity, and no heritage – in such
a scene, the US can take all the oil it wants and will not be questioned
regarding the ownership, the price and the destination of that oil.
However, there is no way that the world will forget the “brazen
arrogance of the power-keepers who decide on the destruction of life
while sipping coffee and posing for photos!”
US soldiers calculatedly bombed the Al-Jazeera television station in
Baghdad, as Al Jazeera made the fatal mistake of giving US the exact
coordinates of their location. Within days a U.S. plane dropped a bomb
directly on the building. The plane was so low that the people inside
the building could hear the bomb coming out of the plane. This was no
accident. The U.S. bombed Al Jazeera television station because it was
the only TV station planning to film the takeover of the Baghdad airport.
But, at the Baghdad airport Saddam’s heavily bribed top military
generals were being flown out of Iraq, many of them to U.S. (in
accordance with an agreement made between Condaleeza Rice and Putin on
April 7, 2003). The U.S. did not want the world to know how or what
transpired during the airport takeover, hence their simple solution was
to eliminate any potential media coverage. There are more than 300
journalists from around the world staying in the Palestine Hotel in
Baghdad. One morning two weeks ago a U.S. soldier outside the hotel took
aim and fired missiles right into the hotel. This was videotaped by a
French newswoman on the balcony of the hotel. It was also no accident.
The U.S. wants to silence and suppress what is happening in Iraq. During
any war, journalists are to be immune from conflict as per the rules of
the Geneva Convention. The U.S. in its arrogance has totally flouted
Geneva Convention. This is a first for any war in recent history. This
is the remarkable extent to which Cheney and Rumsfeld are prepared to go
to silence opposition, hide the truth, and get rich. While the average
American has no idea about these incidents due to complete media
censorship, these facts are certainly well-known in Arab and European
countries. One can only imagine the escalating hatred of the U.S. for
such under-handed actions during war, i.e., the unprecedented murder of
journalists, US use of cluster bombs – also against the Geneva
Convention, its intentional dropping of depleted uranium bombs that will
contaminate the Iraqi land, people and even unborn babies for decades to
come.
Another growing cost for the US economy will be the fast-growing
movement in countries around the world to boycott US and British
produced goods. In South Africa, Pakistan, Egypt, Belgium, Saudi Arabia,
Indonesia, Thailand, Brazil, Chile and even Britain itself, protestors
are demanding that the population boycott all U.S. and British goods.
South Africa Indymedia recently called on the world to “take aim at the
only thing that can bring Bush to his knees: the American economy.”
Already sales of Pepsi and Coca Cola have plunged in Middle Eastern
countries, where they have already begun marketing their own local
drinks like Zam Zam and Mecca Cola. Mecca Colas are now being marketed
in Britain where peace groups recently distribute 36,000 bottles at Hyde
Park. The Iranian government has already banned ads for
U.S.-manufactured goods. With the intention of denying corporate US and
British interests the spoils of this war, peace groups are calling for
boycott of Esso/Exxon, Mobil, Chevron and Texaco. This boycott of
British/US goods will extend way beyond the present. Boycotts can change
the world. The Boston Tea Party started the American revolution. Gandhi
began the boycott of British textiles. The Montgomery Bus boycott
launched the civil rights movement. Cesar Chavez led boycotts of lettuce
and grapes in California. This global boycott has the potential to
become a kind of economic empowerment. As Paul Rockwell writes, “CEOs
who treat world opinion with contempt go berserk when their sacred
profits shrink.” Today, symbols of American culture are being attacked,
including Starbucks, McDonalds and Kentucky Fried Chicken. This economic
pressure may be the only way to stop the greedy profiteers in their
tracks! As the great Dr. Martin Luther King said, “The arc of the
universe is long but bends toward justice.” And as Paul Rockwell writes,
“Time is on the side of the people. Let the boycott begin!”
Assumption
If we imagine an economic model in the mind of the U.S. government,
their assumption would be that this war will bring economic gain and
establish the economic supremacy of the U.S. The body of this model will
claim that the conquest of Iraq will help to stamp out terrorism. But in
reality, rather than stamp out terrorism, this war will cause a
substantial increase in terrorism, simply because global hatred of
America has multiplied to the nth power. Terrorism can be defined as the
war of the poor, while war is the terrorism of the rich. Terrorism can
also be defined as the desperate cry of the powerless suffering humanity
for justice in an economically exploitative, unjust world. The cost in
the form of future terrorism may be immeasurable for the US and for the
world.
Prediction
In the prediction part of the model, the U.S. government would claim
that conquest of Iraq will bring peace, freedom and democracy to Iraq
and will maintain peace, freedom, democracy and economic prosperity in
US. In fact, the exact opposite is happening. In Iraq there is a state
of complete anarchy. Every single government building in Baghdad was
bombed or burned out of existence, with the U.S. calculated plan being
to destroy the entire national infrastructure. U.S. soldiers are doing
only one thing in Iraq and that is controlling areas around the oil
fields. Americans do not know this because it is not being told on the
major media networks like Fox News, CBS and ABC.
As for freedom and democracy in U.S., this government has used the
excuse of 9-11 not only to begin World War IV (ostensibly against
so-called ‘terrorism’) but to re-write the U.S. Constitution like never
before. With Patriot Acts I and II it has stripped away the fundamental
rights of American citizens. The original Constitution created in 1776
concentrated political power primarily in the Congress and the Senate.
The position of President was an afterthought because the early American
colonialists did not want to recreate the kind of dictator they had left
behind in England. Hence the position of President had few powers, while
the essential powers lay with the Congress and Senate. With the passage
of Patriot Act I, there has been a huge shift in political power. In
fact the Act gave near dictatorial powers to the U.S. President. The
most criminal section of Patriot Act II if passed will allow the
government to remove the citizenship of any American and deport the
person at will – based solely on who his friends are and how he thinks!
Both Acts are unprecedented in American history and are essentially
creating a fascist dictatorship. Due to the general political illiteracy
of the American people, this robbing of fundamental freedoms and rights
will not be understood for months to come.
Policy
“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
eventually come to believe it…. The lie can be maintained only for such
time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic
and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally
important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for
the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
truth is the greatest enemy of the State.”
Joseph Goebbels
German Minister of Propaganda, 1933-1945
The bottom line is that 9-11 is being used by the U.S. government to
attack any country anywhere in the world, supposedly for WMD and for
terrorists but in reality to maintain the global economic hegemony of
the U.S. dollar. It will go to any lengths to stop the takeover of the
dollar by the euro, which is the one real challenge to the dollar in
international markets. Iraq already switched to the euro and made big
profits due to the dollar’s steady depreciation. (The dollar declined
15% against the euro in 2002.) Saudi Arabia is also thinking to switch
from the dollar to the euro. But if they dare, the US will surely
declare them as terrorists, crush them militarily, and take over their
country and oil fields. In this way, the US or rather the
corporate-military-industrial complex will make it very tense for OPEC
members to shift to the euro.
As Arnett said, “Saddam sealed his fate when he decided to switch to the
euro in late 2000 (and later converted his $10 billion reserve fund at
the UN to euros) – at that point another … Gulf War became inevitable
under Bush II.” Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld et al are willing to risk economic
hardship for US in the short-term in order to retain the dollar as legal
tender for the long term. If OPEC does manage to switch to the euro, the
US dollar would crash from 20-40% in value and the consequence would be
massive inflation in America, similar to what happened in Argentina.
Foreign investments would start flowing out of US, and there would be a
run on the banks similar to that of the 1930s. The present deficit would
become unserviceable and go into default, and we would face a world
economic crisis. The US economy is totally dependent on the dollar
remaining the world legal tender. Hence we can expect the US military to
remain in Iraq indefinitely, also so as to send a message to the world
that if they dare switch to the euro, they should expect regime along
the lines of Iraq.
Nevertheless, it is reasonable to assume that by the year 2005 OPEC
would switch completely over to the euro for oil pricing. According to
Clark, the aim of the US pre-emptive attack on Iraq is to grab control
of oil production, reduce global oil prices and thereby collapse OPEC’s
price controls and hence their power. The very first item on the US
government agenda hence is to immediately convert Iraq back to the
dollar fiat currency and to quintuple Iraq’s oil output, which will put
its production way beyond that of OPEC. Present total world oil
production is about 75 million barrels, out of which OPEC members
produce about 25 million.
Since Iran has switched to the euro for their oil transactions with
Europe, and since during 2002 Iran’s reserve funds in its central bank
have all been switched to euros, we can certainly expect for Rumsfeld et
al to announce that there are terrorists in Iran or that the Iranian
government is harboring terrorists, and hence US must attack soon. It is
not about terrorism. It is about the dollar and the euro. The American
people have been hoodwinked and lied to by their leaders. And as the
title of William Greider’s book says, “Who Will Tell the People?”
Another problem in the world economy is Japan. If oil prices spiral to
$40, $50 or even $100 a barrel in the coming months, Japan’s fragile
economy will completely collapse and will further devastate the already
faltering US economy. Basically, it looks like the whole world is
getting fed up with US bullying, bribing and threats. North Korea made
the switch to euro in December 2002. While it may not have economic
impact, it is just a sign that countries are tired of Bush-bullying. In
the 1990s the world considered the US as a benevolent albeit
self-centered nation. However since 2000, or since the illegitimate rise
of Bush to power, world opinion towards US has done a negative
reciprocal. Today there is practically no country that likes America.
Partly out of dislike and partly for economic benefit, more and more
countries are moving away from the dollar and shifting to the euro.
China, Venezuela, OPEC countries and Russia are cases in point. Other
third world countries are following the lead of Chavez Frias by entering
barter deals with each other. As the Bush oligarchy has deep interest in
Venezuelan oil reserves, it should be expected that the US media will
soon sing the song of “There is terrorism in Venezuela” – to justify a
US attack there to overturn the democratically elected Venezuelan
government and replace it with a pro-US military junta – thereby putting
Venezuelan oil into US hands. The democratically elected Chavez Frias is
facing an uphill battle against the U.S. government, as still today the
CIA is actively trying to dislodge him so as to get control of the
country and the oil, and keep the country trading in dollars.
Conclusion
While it may appear today that there are substantial marginal benefits
from this war, those benefits will in time be eroded by expansion of the
war to the entire Middle East, Korea, and South American countries. It
will not be a small disaster overseas. It will become World War IV, and
the costs – both economic and human – will be immeasurable. No part of
the world will be spared from these costs and sufferings. It is
completely unrealistic to think that the US can inflict such vast damage
around the world and not have to pay a price for that – both economic
and human.. Hence the American people should be prepared to pay heavily
for the unbounded arrogance of the American government. Despite US
economic collapse, despite the steady inroad of the euro in world
trading, Bush and company will not cease in their imperialist economic
agenda. At present the ratio of euro to dollar is 1 to 1.06 and the
dollar continues to drop in value. It means that due to Bush creating an
unprecedented debt both by giving a tax rebate and going to war, the US
is going to face complete economic collapse. If Al Gore had come to
power, we would have faced a different scenario, as Gore would not have
given a tax rebate. He may have instead raised taxes. Gore would also
not have gone to war. However, even with Gore as president, the euro
would have gained ground even faster and hence the US economy was doomed
regardless of who became president.
It is hoped that in 2004 a new administration may come to power that
will cease unilateral policies and return to its multilateral tradition.
If the UN still exists as a world force, the US could again become a now
much humbler member of this world body – humble due to the crimes of the
present administration. Under the guise of the perpetual “war on
terror”, the Bush regime is hiding from the American people the real
reason for the war on terror – to maintain the dollar as the global fiat
currency and fill the personal pockets of Bush and Company.
The US needs to learn about energy conservation. It needs to learn about
renewable energy sources and sustained balanced budgets so as to reduce
the present budget deficit. It needs to enforce corporate accounting
laws and reinvest in the manufacturing and export sectors so as to bring
the country back into a trade account surplus position. The people at
large must also learn to reduce their excessive energy consumption. The
greatest cost of this war will be that the entire world, in reaction to
the brutality and arrogance of the US government, will switch the euro
so as to cut their ties to US.
We need to crush the economic system called capitalism wherein the
vision of governance begins and ends with Enron, ExxonMobil and Monsanto.
We need to replace capitalism with a kind of economic democracy wherein
people gain control over their local economies, wherein full employment
(newly defined by this author as, ‘Every person willing to work will be
provided a job and paid a livable wage.’) is the norm, and where there
is environmental sustainability and financial stability. International
trade agreements would be created specifically to aid the poor people in
all countries. We need a system wherein people, communities and
countries own the productive assets on which their livelihoods depend,
wherein they will be free from illegitimate foreign debts, and wherein
they have the right to manage the flow of goods and money across their
borders and set their own economic priorities. In such a system, there
would be no scope for affluent countries to demand access to the markets
or resources of weaker countries against their will and interests.
Corporations wishing to do business in another part of the world would
have to apply to that government and be subject to that government’s
laws and taxes.
US imperialist wars (be it Iraq, Iran, Venezuela or Columbia) are all a
symptom of unlimited human greed of a few individuals at the highest
levels of power. That unlimited greed is given free license in the
economic system called capitalism and now global capitalism or
globalization. The harm to humanity as a consequence of this greed is
incalculable, and must be stopped. The way to stop it is to convince the
people from the ground up, from the grassroots level, that there are
better economic systems being developed by the idealistic lovers of
humanity, and these economic systems do not create stark disparities in
wealth. These new economic systems cater fully to the largest number of
people and particularly to the poorest of the poor. They ensure that
every citizen has adequate purchasing power and the five minimum
necessities of life, i.e., food, clothing, shelter, education and
medical care. We need to go back to local people becoming
self-sufficient by growing their own food, producing their own
necessities and controlling the conditions of their lives. In this
scenario, the issue of price and even GDP becomes irrelevant. It becomes
our duty to study these systems and teach them to others, so as to
finally put the economic power into the hands of the people. As was
declared at the United Nations Conference on Indigenous Peoples,
“The majority of the world does not find its roots in Western culture or
tradition. The majority of the world finds its roots in the natural
world, and it is the natural world, and the tradition of the natural
world, which must prevail.”
And in the words of the great economist, Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar,
“There is only one way to stop economic exploitation and alleviate the
plight of the common people, and that is to implement a policy of
decentralized economy in all the sectors of the economy. Successful
planning can never be done by sitting in an air-conditioned office
thousands of miles away from the place where planning is to be
undertaken. Centralized economy can never solve the economic problems of
remote villages. Economic planning must start from the lowest level,
where the experience, expertise and knowledge of the local people can be
harnessed for the benefit of the members of a socio-economic unit. All
types of economic problems can be solved only when economic structures
are built on the basis of decentralized economy.”
_____________________________________
Notes
It does not seem correct to refer to this pre-emptive act of aggression
or attack going against all international laws as a ‘war’ since there
was hardly a fight worth mentioning. The Iraqi generals were heavily
bribed within the first few days and then whisked into planes and off to
faraway places. It means, there was no war, just a brutal one-side
attack on a people without any means to fight back. Perhaps it will go
on record as the most cowardly ‘war’ in history.
2 The largest public service project in US history was the construction
of the Hoover Dam after the Great Depression of the 1930s.
3 Investigative journalist Robert Fisk of the British Independent
personally witnessed blue buses filled with men arriving with museum
maps. These men knew exactly where to go inside the museum and what to
destroy, burn or remove. It was completely planned, and was not anarchic
looting.
4 B.J. Jabri, “Hyper-Imperialists on a Rampage’, Online Journal,
www.onlinejournal.com
5 Coalition forces had been pinned down across Iraq. After Rice’s
meeting with Putin, there was no Republican Guard Resistance to US
forces. (Larry Chin, “Bush’s World War Four: Fall of Iraq Sets up New
‘Clashes of Civilizations’, Online Journal.) ArabVoice (based on US
military sources) published a detailed article on how Republican Guard
generals were flown out of Iraq (www.globalresearch.ca/articles/RAB3044.htm)
References
Alternatives to Economic Globalization: A Better World is Possible – A
Report of the International Forum on Globalization. Bennett-Koehler
Publishers, Inc. San Francisco, 2002, p.
Arnett, Peter, “The Real War? Oil, Europe and Euros”. Internet source.
Clark, William, “The Real Reasons for the Upcoming War with Iraq: A
Macroeconomic and Geostrategic Analysis of the Unspoken Truth”,
www.globalresearch.ca.
House Budget Committee: Democratic Caucus executive summary of
presidential economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey’s report on the costs of
US attack and occupation of Iraq.
www.house.gov/budget_democrats
Kosiak, Steven, “The FY 2004 Defense Budget Request: Is the Currenet
Plan Affordable, Sustainable and Sufficiently Transformational?”
Presented before the House Budget Committee on February 27, 2003.
Nordhaus, William D., “The Economic Consequences of a War With Iraq”.
www.nybooks.com, December 5, 2002.
Rockwell, Paul, “No oil for blood: A post-war boycott in the making”.
Online Journal.
http://www.onlinejournal.com
Sabri, B.J. “Hyper-imperialists On a Rampage”, Online Journal.
http://www.onlinejournal.com
Sarkar, Prabhat Ranjan, Proutist Economics: Discourses on Economic
Liberation, Calcutta, 1992. Copyright
The Author 2004
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