By Ryan McMaken
January 20, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
At Counterpunch, Michael
Hudson has
penned an important article
that outlines the important connections
between US foreign policy, oil, and the
US dollar.
In short, US foreign policy is geared
very much toward controlling oil
resources as part of a larger strategy
to prop up the US dollar. Hudson writes:
The assassination was intended to
escalate America’s presence in Iraq
to keep control of the region’s oil
reserves, and to back Saudi Arabia’s
Wahabi troops (Isis, Al Quaeda in
Iraq, Al Nusra and other divisions
of what are actually America’s
foreign legion) to support U.S.
control of Near Eastern oil as a
buttress of the U.S. dollar. That
remains the key to understanding
this policy, and why it is in the
process of escalating, not dying
down.
The actual context for the
neocon’s action was the balance of
payments, and the role of oil and
energy as a long-term lever of
American diplomacy.
Basically, the US's propensity for
driving up massive budget deficits has
created a need for immense amounts of
deficit spending. This can be handled
through selling lots of government debt,
or through monetizing the debt. But what
if there isn't enough global demand for
US debt? That would mean the US would
have to pay more interest on its debt.
Or, the US could monetize the debt
through the central bank. But that might
cause the value of the dollar to crash.
So, the US regime realized that it must
find ways to prevent the glut of dollars
and debt from actually destroying the
value of the dollar. Fortunately for the
regime, this can be partly managed, it
turns out, through foreign policy.
Hudson continues:
The solution [to the problem of
maintaining the demand for dollars]
turned out to be to replace gold
with U.S. Treasury securities (IOUs)
as the basis of foreign central bank
reserves. After 1971, foreign
central banks had little option for
what to do with their continuing
dollar inflows except to recycle
them to the U.S. economy by buying
U.S. Treasury securities. The effect
of U.S. foreign military spending
thus did not undercut the dollar’s
exchange rate, and did not even
force the Treasury and Federal
Reserve to raise interest rates to
attract foreign exchange to offset
the dollar outflows on military
account. In fact, U.S. foreign
military spending helped finance the
domestic U.S. federal budget
deficit.
An important piece of this strategy
has been a continued alliance with Saudi
Arabia. Saudi Arabia maintains the
world's largest capacity for oil
production, and it was the largest
single producer of crude for most of the
period from the mid-1970s to 2018, when
the
US surpassed both Saudi Arabia and
Russia.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
But Saudi Arabia remains under the US
thumb:
what Saudi Arabia does not save
in dollarized assets with its
oil-export earnings is spent on
buying hundreds of billion of
dollars of U.S. arms exports. This
locks them into dependence on U.S.
supply [of] replacement parts and
repairs, and enables the United
States to turn off Saudi military
hardware at any point of time, in
the event that the Saudis may try to
act independently of U.S. foreign
policy.
So maintaining the dollar as the
world’s reserve currency became a
mainstay of U.S. military spending.
Foreign countries do not have to pay
the Pentagon directly for this
spending. They simply finance the
U.S. Treasury and U.S. banking
system.
However, any move away from this
status quo tends to be met with
paranoia and intervention from the US:
Fear of this development was a
major reason why the United States
moved against Libya, whose foreign
reserves were held in gold, not
dollars, and which was urging other
African countries to follow suit in
order to free themselves from
“Dollar Diplomacy.” Hillary and
Obama invaded, grabbed their gold
supplies (we still have no idea who
ended up with these billions of
dollars' worth of gold) and
destroyed Libya's government, its
public education system, its public
infrastructure …
But the role of oil-producing states
goes beyond merely churning dollars and
US debt to keep the dollar afloat. These
countries also provide the foot soldiers
for many US interventions in terms of
terrorists and guerrilla fighters who
can be used against US enemies. Hudson
declares:
The Vietnam War showed that
modern democracies cannot field
armies for any major military
conflict, because this would require
a draft of its citizens. That would
lead any government attempting such
a draft to be voted out of power.
And without troops, it is not
possible to invade a country to take
it over.
The corollary of this perception
is that democracies have only two
choices when it comes to military
strategy: They can only wage
airpower, bombing opponents; or they
can create a foreign legion, that
is, hire mercenaries or back foreign
governments that provide this
military service.
That is, the US regime can certainly
get away with lots of bombing operations
and other low-manpower operations. But
anything that might require conscription
is a political nonstarter. Hudson notes
that Saudi Arabia, with its particularly
rabid and extreme strain of Islam is
quite useful:
Here once again Saudi Arabia
plays a critical role, through its
control of Wahabi Sunnis turned into
terrorist jihadis willing to
sabotage, bomb, assassinate, blow up
and otherwise fight any target
designated as an enemy of “Islam,”
the euphemism for Saudi Arabia
acting as U.S. client state.
(Religion really is not the key; I
know of no ISIS or similar Wahabi
attack on Israeli targets.) The
United States needs the Saudis to
supply or finance Wahabi crazies. So
in addition to playing a key role in
the U.S. balance of payments by
recycling its oil-export earnings
into U.S. stocks, bonds and other
investments, Saudi Arabia provides
manpower by supporting the Wahabi
members of America’s foreign legion,
ISIS and Al-Nusra/Al-Qaeda.
Terrorism has become the
“democratic” mode of today's U.S.
military policy.
Hudson also notes that the term
"democracy," when used in the context of
foreign policy, has very little to do
with what a normal person would regard
as democracy. Rather,
From the U.S. vantage point, what
is a “democracy”? In
today’s Orwellian vocabulary, it
means any country supporting U.S.
foreign policy. … The antonym to
“democracy” is “terrorist.” That
simply means a nation willing to
fight to become independent from
U.S. neoliberal democracy.
And this leads us to Iran. Hudson
explains:
America’s hatred of Iran starts
with its attempt to control its own
oil production, exports and
earnings. It goes back to 1953, when
Mossadegh was overthrown because he
wanted domestic sovereignty over
Anglo-Persian oil. The CIA-MI6 coup
replaced him with the pliant Shah,
who imposed a police state to
prevent Iranian independence from
U.S. policy. The only physical
places free from the police were the
mosques. That made the Islamic
Republic the path of least
resistance to overthrowing the Shah
and re-asserting Iranian
sovereignty.
Thus, we got the Islamic revolution
of 1979 which has led to forty years of
Iran refusing to play ball in the US
dollar maintenance regime that is
demanded of other oil-producing nations
in the Middle East.
The US is unlikely to let up on this
effort so long as Iran continues to
refuse to take orders from DC on these
matters. It's true that the US can't do
much about China and Russia. But Iran —
unlike North Korea, which wisely secured
nuclear arms for itself — remains an
easy target because of its lack of
nuclear capability.
Being a leftist, Hudson includes some
unfortunate stuff about "neoliberalism,"
as if low taxes and freedom to trade
were somehow driving global war. Hudson
also concocts a theory about how this
oil-dollar policy is driving global
warming. That's a bit of a stretch, but
the connection between foreign policy
and the US dollar that he identifies is
a key factor that tends to be almost
universally ignored by the mainstream
media. As China and Russia work ever
harder to undermine the dollar and its
geopolitical position, small countries
like Iran will become even more
important in the US's drive to maintain
the dollar's status quo. But it
remains to be seen how long the US can
keep it going.