Putin and Xi Plot Their SWIFT
Escape
By Pepe Escobar
January 01, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-"The
Cradle"
- - Vladimir
Putin got straight to the point. At the opening
of his one hour and fourteen minute video
conversation with Xi Jinping on 15 December, he
described Russia-China relations as “an example
of genuine inter-state cooperation in the 21st
century.”
Their myriad levels of
cooperation have been known for years now – from
trade, oil and gas, finance, aerospace and the
fight against Covid-19, to the progressive
interconnection of the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI) and the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU).
But now the stage was set
for the announcement of a serious counter-move
in their carefully coordinated ballet opposing
the relentless Hybrid War/Cold War 2.0 combo
deployed by Empire.
As Assistant to the
President for Foreign Policy Yuri Ushakov
succinctly explained, Putin and Xi agreed to
create an “independent financial structure for
trade operations that could not be influenced by
other countries.”
Diplomatic sources, off
the record, confirmed the structure may be
announced by a joint summit before the end of
2022.
This is a stunning
game-changer in more ways than one. It had been
extensively discussed in previous bilaterals and
in preparations for BRICS summits – mostly
centered on increasing the share of yuan and
rubles in Russia-China settlements, bypassing
the US dollar, and opening new stock market
options for Russian and Chinese investors.
Now we’ve come to the
crunch. And the catalyzing event was none other
than US hawks floating the – financially nuclear
– idea of expelling Russia from SWIFT, the
messaging network used by 11,000+ banks in over
200 countries, as well as financial
institutions, for rapid money transfers
worldwide.
Cutting off Russia from
SWIFT would be part of a harsh new sanctions
package developed in response to an ‘invasion’
of Ukraine that will never happen – mainly
because the only ones praying for it are
professional NATO warmongers.
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Profiting from a
strategic blunder
Once again, an American
strategic blunder offers the Russia-China
self-described “comprehensive strategic
partnership” the chance to advance their
coordination.
Ushakov put it very
diplomatically: it’s time to bypass a SWIFT
mechanism “influenced by third countries” to
form “an independent financial structure.”
That amounts to a serious
game-changer for the entire Global South – as
scores of nations yearn to be released from a de
facto US dollar dictatorship, complete with
recurring Fed quantitative easing circus
packages.
Russia and China have
been experimenting with their alternative
payment systems for quite a while now: the
Russian SPFS (System for Transfer of Financial
Messages) and the Chinese CIPS (Cross Border
Interbank Payment System).
It won’t be easy, as the
most powerful Chinese banks are deep into SWIFT
and have expressed their reservations about
SPFS. Yet, they will have to inevitably
integrate prior to the launch of the new
mechanism, possibly in late 2022.
Once the most important
Russian and Chinese banks – from Sberbank to the
Bank of China – adopt the system, the path opens
for other banks across Eurasia and the Global
South to join in.
In the long run, SWIFT,
prone to non-stop American political
interference, will be increasingly marginalized,
or restricted to Atlanticist latitudes.
Bypassing the US dollar,
on trade and all sorts of financial settlements,
is an absolutely central plank of the
ever-evolving Russia-China notion of a
multipolar world.
The road will be long, of
course, especially when it comes to offering a
solid counterpoint to the US-controlled global
financial system, a maze that includes the
humongous investment houses of the BlackRock,
Vanguard and State Street variety, with their
interlocking shareholding of virtually every
major multinational company.
Yet a SWIFT escape will
rapidly gain momentum, because it is
inextricably linked to a series of developments
that Putin-Xi touched upon in their
conversation, the most important of which are:
1. The progressive
interconnection of BRI and EAEU, offering
expanding roles to the BRICS-run New Development
Bank (NDB) as well as the Asia Infrastructure
Investment Bank (AIIB).
2. The increasing
geopolitical and geo-economic reach of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO),
especially after the admission of Iran in
October.
3. And crucially, the
upcoming Chinese presidency of the BRICS in
2022.
China in 2022 will invest
deeply in
BRICS+. This expanded BRICS club will be
linked to a development process that includes:
1. The consolidation of
the
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
(RCEP) – a massive East Asia trade deal
uniting China, the ASEAN 10 and Japan, and South
Korea, as well as Australia and New Zealand.
2. The African
Continental Free Trade Area (ACFTA).
3. And the memoranda of
understanding signed between the EAEU and
MERCOSUR and between the EAEU and ASEAN.
Anchoring West
Asia
Yaroslav Lissovolik, one
of the world’s leading experts on BRICS+, argues
that it’s now time for BRICS+ 2.0, operating in
a system that opens “the possibility for
bilateral and plurilateral agreements to
complement the core network of regional
alliances formed by BRICS countries and their
respective regional neighbors.”
So if we’re talking about
a major qualitative jump in terms of economic
development across the Global South, the
question is inevitable. What about West Asia?
All these
interconnections, plus an escape from SWIFT,
will certainly profit the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor (CPEC), arguably the flagship
BRI project, to which Beijing plans to annex
Afghanistan.
CPEC will be
progressively connected to the future Iran-China
corridor via Afghanistan, part of the 20 year
Iran-China strategic deal in which BRI projects
will be prominently featured. Iran and China
already trade in yuan and rials, so settlements
between Iran and China in a non-SWIFT mechanism
will be a given.
What happened to Iran is
a classic example of SWIFT becoming hostage of
imperial political manipulation. Iranian banks
were expelled from SWIFT in 2012, because of
pressure from the usual suspects. In 2016,
access was restored as part of the JCPOA,
clinched in 2015. Yet in 2018, under the Trump
administration, Iran was once again cut off from
SWIFT.
None of that will ever
happen with Iran joining the new Russia-China
mechanism.
And that leads us to the
interconnection of China’s BRI expansion in
Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen. The
reconstruction of Syria may be largely financed
via the non-SWIFT mechanism. Same for China
buying Iraqi energy. Same for the reconstruction
of a Yemen possibly hosting a Chinese-owned
port, part of the
“string of pearls.”
Saudi Arabia, the
Emirates and Israel may remain in the US
financial sphere of influence, or lack thereof.
And even if there is no BRICS nation anchoring
West Asia, and no regional integration economic
agreement on the horizon, the role of the
economic integrator is bound to be eventually
played by China.
China will play a similar
role to Brazil anchoring MERCOSUR, Russia
anchoring the EAEU and South Africa anchoring
the SADC/SACU.
Both BRI and the EAEU
will get a tremendous boost by bypassing SWIFT.
You simply can’t go multipolar if you trade
using (devalued) imperial legal tender.
BRI, EAEU and those
interlocking economic development agreements,
combined with digital technology, will be
integrating billions of people in the Global
South.
Think of a possible,
auspicious future spelling out cheap telecom
delivering financial services and world market
access, in a non-dollar environment, to all
those who have been so far cut off from a truly
globalized economy.
Pepe Escobar
is correspondent-at-large at
Asia
Times.
His latest book is
2030.
Follow him on
Facebook.