By Pepe Escobar
A collective West “led”
by unspeakable mediocrities looks at the
Russia-China strategic partnership as if
it was something like a double-headed
Anti-Christ. Xi, for his part, seems not
to be impressed.
January 21, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- The virtual,
special address by President Xi Jinping to the
World Economic Forum’s 2022 Davos Agenda exhibits
all the elements of a riddle inside an enigma.
At first, it certainly could be interpreted as a
simultaneous message to the Empire of Chaos and
global public opinion.
Much more than prescribing “effective doses
against unilateralism, decoupling and ideological
antagonism” – not so subtle allusions to the usual
suspects – Xi most of all positioned China as the
indispensable driver of Globalization 2.0.
The address was simultaneous to the announcement
of China’s GDP growth at 8.1% in 2021 and commodity
trading reaching new highs: the center of global
manufacturing is the world’s biggest exporter for
the 8th consecutive year.
The implementation of the word’s largest
free-trade zone, the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP) across Asia-Pacific, will just
solidify the trend.
Trade with the myriad partner nations of the Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI) increased by 23.6% – and
that essentially means increased Global South trade.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) in China increased
by 20.2% in dollar terms: once again, as in 2020,
China was the top FDI destination on the planet.
The whole trade/commerce landscape should even
improve in 2022 when the China-EU Comprehensive
Agreement on Investment (CAI) is fully ratified.
France, currently presiding the EU Council, is
manifestly in favor.
Compounding the trends, China’s GDP per capita
has reached $12,551, crucially above the notorious
“middle income trap”; above the global average GDP
per capita; and now entering “high-income country”
territory, as defined by the World Bank.
Xi’s key message, when it comes to addressing
“Davos Man” – the trademark WEF audience – was
unmistakable: China is and will continue to remain
the safest of havens for global Capital. The Masters
of the Universe – from BlackRock down – duly nodded
their approval.
But then, there are “countercurrents”. And that
ominous, imminent global economy crisis.
Take me to the
river
Now we enter the deeper enigma of how
interpenetrated Xi’s vision and the Davos agenda
may, or may not, be.
Xi’s main theme is multilateralism. And that’s
the context in which he introduced his rich
“countercurrents” metaphor. Xi de facto held the
collective West as “countercurrents” in the river of
History – incapable of stopping its inexorable flow
to the sea.
Yet these “countercurrents”, as Xi defines them,
are not merely trying to stop the flow of economic
globalization. He leaves it subtly implied they are
trying to stop the flow of Globalization 2.0 as led
by China: a very strong economy working in tandem
with an arguably successful “zero Covid” policy.
He didn’t even have to refer to the West. He just
needed to suggest that China forged its own way to
tackle the current challenges. And the Chinese way
beats the West’s.
The global economy is being confronted, across
the board, by manpower shortages – from harvest
workers to truck drivers to supermarket cashiers.
Costs for everything from raw materials to container
shipping went through the roof. Supply chains are
horribly over-extended and in many cases broken.
The hegemonic narrative blames exclusively the
proverbial Covid-19 variants for the very real
possibility of causing the mother of all supply
chain breakdowns that may hit most of the planet in
2022.
In contrast, variants of guerrilla analysis
sustain that the global economy is being
deliberately being driven over the cliff. The supply
chain breakdown is being facilitated by the
multi-restriction “war on Covid” – which directly
subverts production, trade and services.
Global Capital would never allow a comprehensive
public debate about the toxic role of the financial
system – which has been kept under artificial
respiration since 2008, with central banks
unleashing storms of helicopter money, inflating
real state markets, stocks, precious metal prices.
In real life, what’s nearly inevitable next in the
horizon is the bursting of a massive stock and real
estate bubble all across the West.
A de facto collapse of the global economy would
provide the ultimate “opportunity” (Klaus Schwab’s
terminology) for the WEF’s Great Reset – which
remains the real Davos Agenda. But according to the
hegemonic gospel, that would happen because
of Covid – not because of the implosion of the
financial casino.
For nearly two years, we have been living through
the progressive enshrinement of techno-feudalism –
one of the overarching themes of my latest book,
Raging Twenties.
In lightning speed, the techno-feudalism virus
metastasized into an even more lethal, wilderness of
mirrors variant, with cancel culture enforced by Big
Tech all across the spectrum and science routinely
debased as fake news across social media.
The average citizen remains discombobulated to
the point of lobotomy. Giorgio Agamben defined the
whole process as a
new totalitarianism.
What does
Capital really want?
It’s open to debate to what extent Xi actually
endorses the ultimate “opportunity” offered by
Covid-19: a
Great Reset that essentially refers to the
replacement of a dwindling manufacturing base by
automation, in tandem with a
reset of the financial system.
The concomitant wishful thinking envisages a
global economy that will “move closer to a cleaner
capitalist model”, as embodied, for instance, in the
delightfully benign
Council for Inclusive Capitalism in partnership
with the Catholic Church.
It was up to William Engdahl to ask the crucial
question:
Will the Federal Reserve Crash Global Financial
Markets As a Means to Implementing Their “Great
Reset”?
Xi using Davos as a convenient P.R. platform does
not necessarily mean China subscribes to the Davos
Agenda. Davos, after all, has nothing to do with
multilateralism.
Last December, the WEF actually postponed Davos
2022 from January to early summer. It remains to be
seen whether this may have something to do with the
advent of Cyber Polygon, a cyber pandemic gamed by
the WEF in July 2021.
Herr Schwab himself defined it as “a
comprehensive cyber-attack [that] could bring a
complete halt to the power supply, transportation,
hospital services, our society as a whole. The
Covid-19 crisis would be seen in this respect as a
small disturbance in comparison to a major
cyber-attack.”
So our current – global – predicament may be just
a “small disturbance” compared to what comes next.
And has already been gamed.
No one, from Zeus to Shiva, knows what comes next
– apart from NATO expanding to outer space. Yet it’s
very telling that the distinct possibility of a
global economic crash – while Xi promotes
Globalization 2.0 led by China – is happening
simultaneously to
NATO provoking Russia into war and the US
demonizing China to Kingdom Come.
A collective West “led” by unspeakable
mediocrities looks at the Russia-China strategic
partnership as if it was something like a
double-headed Anti-Christ. Xi, for his part, seems
not to be impressed: watching the river flow, like a
Taoist Bob Dylan, he has just dismissed these mere
“countercurrents” with a wave of his hand.
Pepe Escobar
is correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.
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