By Michael Hudson
February 13, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--The Iron Curtain of the
1940s and ‘50s was ostensibly designed to isolate
Russia from Western Europe – to keep out Communist
ideology and military penetration. Today’s sanctions
regime is aimed inward, to prevent America’s NATO
and other Western allies from opening up more trade
and investment with Russia and China. The
aim is not so much to isolate Russia and China as to
hold these allies firmly within America’s own
economic orbit. Allies are to forego the benefits of
importing Russian gas and Chinese products, buying
much higher-priced U.S. LNG and other exports,
capped by more U.S. arms.
The sanctions that U.S. diplomats are insisting
that their allies impose against trade with Russia
and China are aimed ostensibly at deterring a
military buildup. But such a buildup cannot really
be the main Russian and Chinese concern. They have
much more to gain by offering mutual economic
benefits to the West. So the underlying question is
whether Europe will find its advantage in replacing
U.S. exports with Russian and Chinese supplies and
the associated mutual economic linkages.
What worries American diplomats is that Germany,
other NATO nations and countries along the Belt and
Road route understand the gains that can be made by
opening up peaceful trade and investment. If there
is no Russian or Chinese plan to invade or bomb
them, what is the need for NATO? What is the need
for such heavy purchases of U.S. military hardware
by America’s affluent allies? And if there is no
inherently adversarial relationship, why do foreign
countries need to sacrifice their own trade and
financial interests by relying exclusively on U.S.
exporters and investors?
These are the concerns that have prompted French
Prime Minister Macron to call forth the ghost of
Charles de Gaulle and urge Europe to turn away from
what he calls NATO’s “brain-dead” Cold War and beak
with the pro-U.S. trade arrangements that are
imposing rising costs on Europe while denying it
potential gains from trade with Eurasia. Even
Germany is balking at demands that it freeze by this
coming March by going without Russian gas.
Instead of a real military threat from Russia and
China, the problem for American strategists is the
absence of such a threat. All countries
have come to realize that the world has reached a
point at which no industrial economy has the
manpower and political ability to mobilize a
standing army of the size that would be needed to
invade or even wage a major battle with a
significant adversary. That political cost makes it
uneconomic for Russia to retaliate against NATO
adventurism prodding at its western border trying to
incite a military response. It’s just not worth
taking over Ukraine.
America’s rising pressure on its allies threatens
to drive them out of the U.S. orbit. For over 75
years they had little practical alternative to U.S.
hegemony. But that is now changing. America no
longer has the monetary power and seemingly chronic
trade and balance-of-payments surplus that enabled
it to draw up the world’s trade and investment rules
in 1944-45. The threat to U.S. dominance is that
China, Russia and Mackinder’s Eurasian World Island
heartland are offering better trade and investment
opportunities than are available from the United
States with its increasingly desperate demand for
sacrifices from its NATO and other allies.
The most glaring example is the U.S. drive to
block Germany from authorizing the Nord Stream 2
pipeline to obtain Russian gas for the coming cold
weather. Angela Merkel agreed with Donald Trump to
spend $1 billion building a new LNG port to become
more dependent on highly priced U.S. LNG. (The plan
was cancelled after the U.S. and German elections
changed both leaders.) But Germany has no other way
of heating many of its houses and office buildings
(or supplying its fertilizer companies) than with
Russian gas.
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The only way left for U.S. diplomats to block
European purchases is to goad Russia into a military
response and then claim that avenging this response
outweighs any purely national economic interest. As
hawkish Under-Secretary of State for Political
Affairs, Victoria Nuland, explained in a State
Department press briefing on January 27: “If Russia
invades Ukraine one way or another Nord Stream 2
will not move forward.”
The problem is to create a suitably offensive
incident and depict Russia as the aggressor.
Nuland expressed who was dictating the policies
of NATO members succinctly in 2014: “Fuck the EU.”
That was said as she told the U.S. ambassador to
Ukraine that the State Department was backing the
puppet Arseniy Yatsenyuk as Ukrainian prime minister
(removed after two years in a corruption scandal),
and U.S. political agencies backed the bloody Maidan
massacre that ushered in what are now eight years of
civil war. The result devastated Ukraine much as
U.S. violence had done in Syria, Iraq and
Afghanistan. This is not a policy of world peace or
democracy that European voters endorse.
U.S. trade sanctions imposed on its NATO allies
extend across the trade spectrum. Austerity-ridden
Lithuania gave up its cheese and agricultural market
in Russia, and is blocking its state-owned railroad
from carrying Belarus potash to the Baltic port of
Klaipeda. The port’s majority owner complained that
“Lithuania will lose hundreds of millions of dollars
from halting Belarus exports through Klaipeda,” and
“could face legal claims of $15 billion over broken
contracts.”
Lithuania has even agreed to U.S. prompting to
recognize Taiwan, resulting in China refusing to
import German or other products that include
Lithuanian-made components.
Europe is to impose sanctions at the cost of
rising energy and agricultural prices by giving
priority to imports from the United States and
foregoing Russian, Belarusian and other linkages
outside of the Dollar Area. As Sergey Lavrov put
matters: “When the United States thinks that
something suits its interests, it can betray those
with whom it was friendly, with whom it cooperated
and who catered to its positions around the world.”
America’s sanctions on its allies hurt their
economies, not those of Russia and China
What seems ironic is that such sanctions against
Russia and China have ended up helping rather than
hurting them. But the primary aim was not to hurt
nor to help the Russian and Chinese economies. After
all, it is axiomatic that sanctions force the
targeted countries to become more self-reliant.
Deprived of Lithuanian cheese, Russian producers
have produced their own, and no longer need to
import it from the Baltic states. America’s
underlying economic rivalry is aimed at keeping
European and its allied Asian countries in its own
increasingly protected economic orbit. Germany,
Lithuania and other allies are told to impose
sanctions directed against their own economic
welfare by not trading with countries outside the
U.S. dollar-area orbit.
Quite apart from the threat of actual war
resulting from U.S. bellicosity, the cost to
America’s allies of surrendering to U.S. trade and
investment demands is becoming so high as to be
politically unaffordable. For nearly a century there
has been little alternative but to agree to trade
and investment rules favoring the U.S. economy as
the price of receiving U.S. financial and trade
support and even military security. But an
alternative is now threatening to emerge – one
offering benefits from China’s Belt and Road
initiative, and from Russia’s desire for foreign
investment to help modernize its industrial
organization, as seemed to be promised thirty years
ago in 1991.
Ever since the closing years of World War II,
U.S. diplomacy has aimed at locking Britain, France,
and especially defeated Germany and Japan, into
becoming U.S. economic and military dependencies. As
I documented in Super Imperialism, American
diplomats broke up the British Empire and absorbed
its Sterling Area by the onerous terms imposed first
by Lend-Lease and then the Anglo-American Loan
Agreement of 1946. The latter’s terms obliged
Britain to give up its Imperial Preference policy
and unblock the sterling balances that India and
other colonies had accumulated for their
raw-materials exports during the war, thus opening
the British Commonwealth to U.S. exports.
Britain committed itself not to recover its
prewar markets by devaluing sterling. U.S. diplomats
then created the IMF and World Bank on terms that
promoted U.S. export markets and deterred
competition from Britain and other former rivals.
Debates in the House of Lords and the House of
Commons showed that British politicians recognized
that they were being consigned to a subservient
economic position, but felt that they had no
alternative. And once they gave up, U.S. diplomats
had a free hand in confronting the rest of Europe.
Financial power has enabled America to continue
dominating Western diplomacy despite being forced
off gold in 1971 as a result of the
balance-of-payments costs of its overseas military
spending. For the past half-century, foreign
countries have kept their international monetary
reserves in U.S. dollars – mainly in U.S. Treasury
securities, U.S. bank accounts and other financial
investments in the U.S. economy. The Treasury-bill
standard obliges foreign central banks to finance
America’s military-based balance-of-payments deficit
– and in the process, the domestic government budget
deficit.
The United States does not need this recycling to
create money. The government can simply print money,
as MMT has demonstrated. But the United States does
need this foreign central bank dollar recycling to
balance its international payments and support the
dollar’s exchange rate. If the dollar were to
decline, foreign countries would find it much easier
to pay international dollar-debts in their own
currencies. U.S. import prices would rise, and it
would be more costly for U.S. investors to buy
foreign assets. And foreigners would lose money on
U.S. stocks and bonds as denominated in their own
currencies, and would drop them. Central banks in
particular would take a loss on the Treasury’s
dollar bonds that they hold in their monetary
reserves – and would find their interest to lie in
moving out of the dollar. So the U.S. balance of
payments and exchange rate are both threatened by
U.S. belligerency and military spending throughout
the world – yet its diplomats are trying to
stabilize matters by ramping up the military threat
to crisis levels.
U.S. drives to keep its European and East Asian
protectorates locked into its own sphere of
influence is threatened by the emergence of China
and Russia independently of the United States while
the U.S. economy is de-industrializing as a result
of its own deliberate policy choices. The industrial
dynamic that made the United States so dominant from
the late 19th century up to the 1970s has
given way to an evangelistic neoliberal
financialization. That is why U.S. diplomats need to
arm-twist their allies to block their economic
relations with post-Soviet Russia and socialist
China, whose growth is outstripping that of the
United States and whose trade arrangements offer
more opportunities for mutual gain.
At issue is how long the United States can block
its allies from taking advantage of China’s economic
growth. Will Germany, France and other NATO
countries seek prosperity for themselves instead of
letting the U.S. dollar standard and trade
preferences siphon off their economic surplus?
Oil diplomacy and America’s dream for
post-Soviet Russia
The expectation of Gorbachev and other Russian
officials in 1991 was that their economy would turn
to the West for reorganization along the lines that
had made the U.S., German and other economies so
prosperous. The mutual expectation in Russia and
Western Europe was for German, French and other
investors to restructure the post-Soviet economy
along more efficient lines.
That was not the U.S. plan. When Senator John
McCain called Russia “a gas station with atom
bombs,” that was America’s dream for what they
wanted Russia to be – with Russia’s gas companies
passing into control by U.S. stockholders, starting
with the planned buyout of Yukos as arranged with
Mikhail Khordokovsky. The last thing that U.S.
strategists wanted to see was a thriving revived
Russia. U.S. advisors sought to privatize Russia’s
natural resources and other non-industrial assets,
by turning them over to kleptocrats who could “cash
out” on the value of what they had privatized only
by selling to U.S. and other foreign investors for
hard currency. The result was a neoliberal economic
and demographic collapse throughout the post-Soviet
states.
In some ways, America has been turning itself
into its own version of a gas station with atom
bombs (and arms exports). U.S. oil diplomacy aims to
control the world’s oil trade so that its enormous
profits will accrue to the major U.S. oil companies.
It was to keep Iranian oil in the hands of British
Petroleum that the CIA’s Kermit Roosevelt worked
with British Petroleum’s Anglo-Persian Oil Company
to overthrow Iran’s elected leader Mohammed
Mossadegh in 1954 when he sought to nationalize the
company after it refused decade after decade to
perform its promised contributions to the economy.
After installing the Shah whose democracy was based
on a vicious police state, Iran threatened once
again to act as the master of its own oil resources.
So it was once again confronted with U.S.-sponsored
sanctions, which remain in effect today. The aim of
such sanctions is to keep the world oil trade firmly
under U.S. control, because oil is energy and energy
is the key to productivity and real GDP.
In cases where foreign governments such as Saudi
Arabia and neighboring Arab petrostates have taken
control, the export earnings of their oil are to be
deposited in U.S. financial markets to support the
dollar’s exchange rate and U.S. financial
domination. When they quadrupled their oil prices in
1973-74 (in response to the U.S. quadrupling of its
grain-export prices), the U.S. State Department laid
down the law and told Saudi Arabia that it could
charge as much as it wanted for its oil (thereby
raising the price umbrella for U.S. oil producers),
but it had to recycle its oil-export earnings to the
United States in dollar-denominated securities –
mainly in U.S. Treasury securities and U.S. bank
accounts, along with some minority holdings of U.S.
stocks and bonds (but only as passive investors, not
using this financial power to control corporate
policy).
The second mode of recycling oil-export earnings
was to buy U.S. arms exports, with Saudi Arabia
becoming one of the military-industrial complex’s
largest customers. U.S. arms production actually is
not primarily military in character. As the world is
now seeing in the kerfuffle over Ukraine, America
does not have a fighting army. What it has
is what used to be called an “eating army.” U.S.
arms production employs labor and produces weaponry
as a kind of prestige good for governments to show
off, not for actual fighting. Like most luxury
goods, the markup is very high. That is the essence
of high fashion and style, after all. The MIC uses
its profits to subsidize U.S. civilian production in
a way that does not violate the letter of
international trade laws against government subsidy.
Sometimes, of course, military force is indeed
used. In Iraq, first George W. Bush and then Barack
Obama used the military to seize the country’ oil
reserves, along with those of Syria and Libya.
Control of world oil has been the buttress of
America’s balance of payments. Despite the global
drive to slow the planet’s warming, U.S. officials
continue to view oil as the key to America’s
economic supremacy. That is why the U.S. military is
still refusing to obey Iraq’s orders to leave their
country, keeping its troops in control of Iraqi oil,
and why it agreed with the French to destroy Libya
and still has troops in the oilfields of Syria.
Closer to home, President Biden has approved
offshore drilling and supports Canada’s expansion of
its Athabasca tar sands, environmentally the
dirtiest oil in the world.
Along with oil and food exports, arms exports
support the Treasury-bill standard’s financing of
America’s overseas military spending on its 750
bases abroad. But without a standing enemy
constantly threatening at the gates, NATO’s
existence falls apart. What would be the need for
countries to buy submarines, aircraft carriers,
airplanes, tanks, missiles and other arms?
As the United States has de-industrialized, its
trade and balance-of-payments deficit is becoming
more problematic. It needs arms export sales to help
reduce its widening trade deficit and also to
subsidize its commercial aircraft and related
civilian sectors. The challenge is how to maintain
its prosperity and world dominance as it
de-industrializes while economic growth is surging
ahead in China and now even Russia.
America has lost its industrial cost advantage by
the sharp rise in its cost of living and doing
business in its financialized post-industrial
rentier economy. Additionally, as Seymour
Melman explained in the 1970s, Pentagon capitalism
is based on cost-plus contracts: The higher military
hardware costs, the more profit its manufacturers
receive. So U.S. arms are over-engineered – hence,
the $500 toilet seats instead of a $50 model. The
main attractiveness of luxury goods after all,
including military hardware, is their high
price.
This is the background for U.S. fury at its
failure to seize Russia’s oil resources – and at
seeing Russia also break free militarily to create
its own arms exports, which now are typically better
and much less costly than those of the U.S. Today
Russia is in the position of Iran in 1954 and again
in 1979. Not only do its oil sales rival those of
U.S. LNG, but Russia keeps its oil-export earnings
at home to finance its re-industrialization, so as
to rebuild the economy that was destroyed by the
U.S.-sponsored shock “therapy” of the 1990s.
The line of least resistance for U.S. strategy
seeking to maintain control of the world’s oil
supply while maintaining its luxury-arms export
market via NATO is to Cry Wolf and insist that
Russia is on the verge of invading Ukraine – as if
Russia had anything to gain by quagmire warfare over
Europe’s poorest and least productive economy. The
winter of 2021-22 has seen a long attempt at U.S.
prodding of NATO and Russia to fight – without
success.
U.S. dreams of a neoliberalized China as a
U.S. corporate affiliate
America has de-industrialized as a deliberate
policy of slashing production costs as its
manufacturing companies have sought low-wage labor
abroad, most notably in China. This shift was not a
rivalry with China, but was viewed as mutual gain.
American banks and investors were expected to secure
control and the profits of Chinese industry as it
was marketized. The rivalry was between U.S.
employers and U.S. labor, and the class-war weapon
was offshoring and, in the process, cutting back
government social spending.
Similar to the Russian pursuit of oil, arms and
agricultural trade independent of U.S. control,
China’s offense is keeping the profits of its
industrialization at home, retaining state ownership
of significant corporations and, most of all,
keeping money creation and the Bank of China as a
public utility to fund its own capital formation
instead of letting U.S. banks and brokerage houses
provide its financing and siphon off its surplus in
the form of interest, dividends and management fees.
The one saving grace to U.S. corporate planners has
been China’s role in deterring U.S. wages from
rising by providing a source of low-priced labor to
enable American manufacturers to offshore and
outsource their production.
The Democratic Party’s class war against
unionized labor started in the Carter Administration
and greatly accelerated when Bill Clinton opened the
southern border with NAFTA. A string of maquiladoras
were established along the border to supply
low-priced handicraft labor. This became so
successful a corporate profit center that Clinton
pressed to admit China into the World Trade
Organization in December 2001, in the closing month
of his administration. The dream was for it to
become a profit center for U.S. investors, producing
for U.S. companies and financing its capital
investment (and housing and government spending too,
it was hoped) by borrowing U.S. dollars and
organizing its industry in a stock market that, like
that of Russia in 1994-96, would become a leading
provider of finance-capital gains for U.S. and other
foreign investors.
Walmart, Apple and many other U.S. companies
organized production facilities in China, which
necessarily involved technology transfers and
creation of an efficient infrastructure for export
trade. Goldman Sachs led the financial incursion,
and helped China’s stock market soar. All this was
what America had been urging.
Where did America’s neoliberal Cold War dream go
wrong? For starters, China did not follow the World
Bank’s policy of steering governments to borrow in
dollars to hire U.S. engineering firms to provide
export infrastructure. It industrialized in much the
same way that the United States and Germany did in
the late 19th century: By heavy public
investment in infrastructure to provide basic needs
at subsidized prices or freely, from health care and
education to transportation and communications, in
order to minimize the cost of living that employers
and exporters had to pay. Most important, China
avoided foreign debt service by creating its own
money and keeping the most important production
facilities in its own hands.
U.S. demands are driving its allies out of
the dollar-NATO trade and monetary orbit
As in a classical Greek tragedy, U.S. foreign
policy is bringing about precisely the outcome that
it most fears. Overplaying their hand with their own
NATO allies, U.S. diplomats are bringing about
Kissinger’s nightmare scenario, driving Russia and
China together. While America’s allies are told to
bear the costs of U.S. sanctions, Russia and China
are benefiting by being obliged to diversify and
make their own economies independent of reliance on
U.S. suppliers of food and other basic needs. Above
all, these two countries are creating their own
de-dollarized credit and bank-clearing systems, and
holding their international monetary reserves in the
form of gold, euros and each other’s currencies to
conduct their mutual trade and investment.
This de-dollarization provides an alternative to
the unipolar U.S. ability to gain free foreign
credit via the U.S. Treasury-bill standard for world
monetary reserves. As foreign countries and their
central banks de-dollarize, what will support the
dollar? Without the free line of credit provided by
central banks automatically recycling America’s
foreign military and other overseas spending back to
the U.S. economy (with only a minimal return), how
can the United States balance its international
payments in the face of its de-industrialization?
The United States cannot simply reverse its
de-industrialization and dependence on Chinese and
other Asian labor by bringing production back home.
It has built too high a rentier overhead
into its economy for its labor to be able to compete
internationally, given the U.S. wage-earner’s
budgetary demands to pay high and rising housing and
education costs, debt service and health insurance,
and for privatized infrastructure services.
The only way for the United States to sustain its
international financial balance is by monopoly
pricing of its arms, patented pharmaceutical and
information-technology exports, and by buying
control of the most lucrative production and
potentially rent-extracting sectors abroad – in
other words, by spreading neoliberal economic policy
throughout the world in a way that obliges other
countries to depend on U.S. loans and investment.
That is not a way for national economies to grow.
The alternative to neoliberal doctrine is China’s
growth policies that follow the same basic
industrial logic by which Britain, the United
States, Germany and France rose to industrial power
during their own industrial takeoffs with strong
government support and social spending programs.
The United States has abandoned this traditional
industrial policy since the 1980s. It is imposing on
its own economy the neoliberal policies that
de-industrialized Pinochetista Chile, Thatcherite
Britain and the post-industrial former Soviet
republics, the Baltics and Ukraine since 1991. Its
highly polarized and debt-leveraged prosperity is
based on inflating real estate and securities prices
and privatizing infrastructure.
This neoliberalism has been a path to becoming a
failed economy and indeed, a failed state, obliged
to suffer debt deflation, rising housing prices and
rents as owner-occupancy rates decline, as well as
exorbitant medical and other costs resulting from
privatizing what other countries provide freely or
at subsidized prices as human rights – health care,
education, medical insurance and pensions.
The success of China’s industrial policy with a
mixed economy and state control of the monetary and
credit system has led U.S. strategists to fear that
Western European and Asian economies may find their
advantage to lie in integrating more closely with
China and Russia. The U.S. seems to have no response
to such a global rapprochement with China and Russia
except economic sanctions and military belligerence.
That New Cold War stance is expensive, and other
countries are balking at bearing the cost of a
conflict that has no benefit for themselves and
indeed, threatens to destabilize their own economic
growth and political independence.
Without subsidy from these countries, especially
as China, Russia and their neighbors de-dollarize
their economies, how can the United States maintain
the balance-of-payments costs of its overseas
military spending? Cutting back that spending, and
indeed recovering industrial self-reliance and
competitive economic power, would require a
transformation of American politics. Such a change
seems unlikely, but without it, how long can
America’s post-industrial rentier economy
manage to force other countries to provide it with
the economic affluence (literally a flowing-in) that
it is no longer producing at home?
The views expressed in this article are
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