U.S. Ties
Noose Around Neck Of Venezuela’s Economy
By Manlio
Dinucci
Washington’s decision to tie a noose round
the neck of Venezuela’s economy (presented
as sanctions for notional crimes) is
effectively preventing Caracas from allowing
its oil to flow to allies of the U.S.A.. The
knock on effect: from now on, Venezuela will
export its oil to China. By doing so,
Venezuela’s contracts will no longer be
established in dollars but the yuan. This
will soon threaten the supremacy of the US
currency and, clearly, the US economy. So
now, “the party that thought it had the key
to the prison door, is held hostage in the
cell”.
September 22,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The U.S.A. is applying increasing pressure on
Venezuela, a country that, in accordance with the
way the Pentagon has carved up the world, falls
within the “jurisdiction” of the U.S. Southern
Command (Southcom). SouthCom encompasses 31
countries and 16 territories that together form
Latin America and the Caribbean. It has ground
troops, naval and air forces and a marine corps, not
to mention special forces and three specific task
forces. The same strategy that the U.S.A. and Nato
applied in a different context in Libya and Syria,
could very well be adopted against Venezuela: the
infiltration of special forces and mercenaries that
slosh oil onto Venezuelan hearths where tensions are
already inflamed, catalyzing armed conflicts. The
government is then charged with massacring its own
people which provides the cover for “humanitarian
intervention” by a US-led coalition.
This
scenario is all the more probable after Venezuelan
Minister of Oil announced on 15 September 2017:
“From this week, the average price of oil will be
indicated in the Chinese yuan”. For the first time,
the sales price of Venezuelan oil is no longer
priced in the dollar.
This is
Caracas’s response to the sanctions imposed by the
Trump Administration on 25 August; sanctions far
harsher than those imposed by the Obama
Administration in 2014, for the Trump sanctions
prevent Venezuela from cashing in the dollars
received from selling oil to the United States -
more than a million barrels per day. Until now,
these dollars were used to import consumer goods
such as foodstuffs and medicines.
The
sanctions also prevent bonds issued by the PDVSA
(the Venezuelan state oil company), from being
purchased. Washington is seeking to achieve two
objectives:
• to heighten in Venezuela a scarcity of basic
necessities and thus provoke growing discontent
among the people, which is exploited by internal
opposition (bribed and fed by the U.S.A.) with the
aim of demolishing Maduro’s government; and
• to send the Venezuelan state into default, that
is, to bankrupt it, preventing it from paying its
foreign debt instalments. In other words, to
bankrupt the state with the biggest oil reserves in
the world, reserves that are more than ten times the
size of the US’s.
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Caracas
is seeking to dodge the stranglehold of the
sanctions. It is no longer quoting the sales
price of oil in the US dollar. From now on, this
price will be quoted in the Chinese yuan. A year
ago, the yuan had entered the IMF’s basket of
currencies (joining the dollar, the euro, the
yen and the sterling) and Peking is all set to
launch future contracts for the sale and
purchase of oil in yuan, convertible into gold.
“If the new future were to gain a foothold,
eroding even just partly the excessive power of
the petrodollar, it would be a thundering blow
for the American economy”, comments Il Sole
24 Ore.
What is
being debated by Russia, China and other countries,
is not only the excessive power of the petrodollar
(the currency of reserve earned from the sale of
oil), but the very hegemony of the dollar. Its value
is determined not by the US’s real economic capacity
but by the fact that the dollar constitutes almost
two thirds of the global reserve currency and is the
currency used to stabilize the price of oil, gold
and goods generally. This permits the Federal
Reserve, the Central Bank (which is a private bank),
to print thousands of billions of dollars to fund
the U.S.A’s colossal debt – around 23,000 billion
dollars – through purchasing bonds and other
instruments issued by the Treasury.
In this
context, Venezuela’s decision to free the price of
oil from the dollar is causing a seismic tremor
that, from the South American epicentre, is making
the entire imperial palace, founded on the dollar,
tremor. If the example set by Venezuela were to
provoke a contagion, if the dollar were no longer to
be the main currency of trade and the international
reserve currency, an immense quantity of dollars
would flood the market, making the value of the US
currency collapse.
This
is the real motive pushing President Obama to
declare “a national emergency against the unusual
and extraordinary threat posed to national security
and US foreign policy by the situation in Venezuela”
in the Executive Order of 9 March 2015 [1].
This is the
same motive for which President Trump announces that
the “military option” against Venezuela is now on
the table. The U.S. Southern Command is getting
ready for this. Its emblem is the Imperial Eagle
that dominates Central and South America, ready to
sink its claws into whoever rebels against the
Dollar’s empire.
Translation -
Anoosha Boralessa -
Source -
Il Manifesto (Italy)
- Via
Voltaire Network
See also -
More Bases, Military
Exercises: The (Para)Military Option Against
Venezuela in Action
U.S. not ruling out possible
oil embargo on Venezuela: Haley
Whitney Webb : Venezuela
Accused Of Drug Peddling After Dropping U.S.’
Petrodollar Trade Scheme
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