By Pepe Escobar
June 26, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--
Let’s cut to the
chase and roll in the Putin Top Ten of the
New Era, announced by the Russian President
live at the St. Petersburg forum for
both the Global North and South.
The era of the
unipolar world is over.
The rupture with the
West is irreversible and definitive. No
pressure from the West will change it.
Russia has renewed
its sovereignty. Reinforcement of political
and economic sovereignty is an absolute
priority.
The EU has completely
lost its political sovereignty. The current
crisis shows the EU is not ready to play the
role of an independent, sovereign actor.
It’s just en ensemble of American vassals
deprived of any politico-military
sovereignty.
Sovereignty cannot be
partial. Either you’re a sovereign or a
colony.
Hunger in the poorest
nations will be on the conscience of the
West and euro-democracy.
Russia will supply
grains to the poorer nations in Africa and
the Middle East.
Russia will invest in
internal economic development and
reorientation of trade towards nations
independent of the U.S.
The future world
order, already in progress, will be formed
by strong sovereign states.
The ship has sailed.
There’s no turning back.
How does it feel, for
the collective West, to be caught in such a
crossfire hurricane? Well, it gets more
devastating when we add to the new roadmap
the latest on the energy front.
Rosneft CEO Igor
Sechin, in St. Petersburg, stressed that the
global economic crisis is gaining momentum
not because of sanctions, but exacerbated by
them; Europe “commits energy suicide” by
sanctioning Russia; sanctions against Russia
have done away with the much lauded “green
transition”, as that is no longer needed to
manipulate markets; and Russia, with its
vast energy potential, “is the Noah’s Ark of
the world economy.”
For his part Gazprom
CEO Alexey Miller could not be more scathing
on the sharp decline in the gas flow to the
EU due to Siemens’ refusal and/or incapacity
to repair the Nord Stream 1 pumping engine:
“Well, of course, Gazprom was forced to
reduce the volume of gas supplies to Europe
by 20%+. But you know, prices have increased
not by 20%+, but by several times!
Therefore, I’m sorry if I say that we don’t
feel offended by anyone, we are not
particularly concerned by this situation.”
If this pain dial
overdrive was not enough to hurl the
collective West – or NATOstan – into
Terminal Hysteria, then Putin’s sharp
comment on possibly allowing Mr. Sarmat to
present his business card to
“decision-making centers in Kiev”, those
that are ordering the current shelling and
killing of civilians in Donetsk, definitely
did the trick:
“As for the red
lines, let me keep them to myself, because
this will mean quite tough actions on the
decision-making centers. But this is an area
that shouldn’t be disclosed to people
outside the military-political leadership of
the country. Those who deserve appropriate
actions on our part should draw a conclusion
for themselves – what they may face if they
cross the line.”
Baby please,
stop breaking down
Alastair Crooke has
masterfully
outlined how the collective West’s
zugzwang leaves it lumbering around, dazed
and confused. Now let’s examine the state of
play on the opposite side of the chessboard,
focusing on the BRICS summit this Thursday
in Beijing.
As much as the Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI), the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO), the Eurasia
Economic Union (EAEU) and ASEAN, now it’s
time for a reinvigorated BRICS to step up
its game. In conjunction, these are the key
organizations/instruments that will be
carving the pathways towards the post-unipolar
era.
Both China and India
(which between them were the largest
economies in the world for centuries before
the brief Western colonial interregnum) are
already close and getting closer to “the
Noah’s Ark of the world economy”.
The G20 – hostages of
the Michael Hudson-defined FIRE scam that is
the core of the financialized neoliberal
casino – is slowly fading away, while a
potential new G8 ramps up: and that is
directly connected to BRICS expansion, one
of the key themes of this week’s summit. An
expanded BRICS with a parallel G8
configuration is bound to easily overtake
the Western-centric one in importance as
well as GDP by purchasing power parity
(PPP).
BRICS in 2021 already
added Bangladesh, Egypt, the UAE and Uruguay
to its New Development Bank (NDB). In May,
at Foreign Ministry-level debates,
Argentina, Egypt, Indonesia, Kazakhstan,
Nigeria, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Senegal and
Thailand were added to the 5 BRICS members.
Leaders of some of these nations will be
connected to the Beijing summit.
BRICS plays a
completely different game from the G20. They
aim for the grassroots, and it’s all about
slowly “building trust” – a very Chinese
concept. They are creating an independent
Credit Rating Agency – away from the
Anglo-American racket – and deepening a
Currency Reserves Arrangement. The NDB –
including its regional offices in India and
South Africa – has been involved in hundreds
of projects. Time will tell: one day the NDB
will make the World Bank superfluous.
Comparisons between
BRICS and the Quad, a U.S. concoction, are
silly. Quad is just another crude mechanism
to contain China. Yet there’s no question
India treads on tightrope walker territory,
as it’s a member of both BRICS and Quad, and
made a vastly misguided decision to walk out
of the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP) – the largest free trade
deal on the planet – opting instead to
adhere to the American pie-in-the-sky
Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF).
Yet India, long term,
skillfully guided by Russia, is being
steered to find essential common ground with
China in several key issues.
BRICS, especially in
its expanded BRICS+ version, is bound to
increase cooperation on building truly
stable supply chains, and a settlement
mechanism for resources and raw material
trade, which inevitably has to be based in
local currencies. Then the path will be open
for the Holy Grail: a BRICS payment system
as a credible alternative to the weaponized
U.S. dollar and SWIFT.
Meanwhile, a torrent
of bilateral investments from both China and
India in the manufacturing and services
sector around their neighbors is bound to
lift up smaller players in both Southeast
Asia and South Asia: think Cambodia and
Bangladesh as important cogs in a vast
supply wheel.
Yaroslav Lissovolik
had already proposed a
BEAMS concept as the core of this BRICS
integration drive, uniting “the key regional
integration initiatives of BRICS economies
such as BIMSTEC, EAEU, the ASEAN-China free
trade agreement, Mercosur and SADC/SACU.”
It’s only
(BRICS) rock’n roll
Now Beijing seems
eager to promote “an inclusive format for
dialogue spanning
all the main regions of the Global South
via aggregating the regional integration
platforms in Eurasia, Africa and Latin
America. Going forward this format may be
further expanded to include other regional
integration blocks from Eurasia, such as the
GCC, EAEU and others.”
Lissovolik notes how
the ideal path from now on should be “the
greater inclusivity of BRICS via the BRICS+
framework that allows smaller economies that
are the regional partners of BRICS to have a
say in the new global governance framework.”
Before he addressed
the St. Petersburg forum on video, President
Xi called Putin personally to say, among
other things, that he’s got China’s back on
all “sovereignty and security” themes. They
also, inevitably, discussed the relevance of
BRICS as a key platform towards the
multipolar world.
Meanwhile, the
collective West plunges deeper into the
maelstrom. A massive national demonstration
of trade unions this past Monday paralyzed
Brussels – the capital of the EU and NATO –
as 80,000 people expressed their anger at
the rising and rising cost of living; called
for elites to “spend money on salaries, not
on weapons”; and yelled in unison “Stop
NATO.”
It’s zugzwang all
over again. The EU’s “direct losses”, as
Putin stressed, provoked by the sanctions
hysteria, “could exceed $400 billion a
year”. Russia’s energy earnings have hit
record levels. The ruble is at a 7-year high
against the euro.
It’s a blast that
arguably the most powerful cultural artifact
of the entire Cold War – and Western
supremacy – era, the perennial Rolling
Stones, is currently on tour across a
“caught in a crossfire hurricane” EU. On
every show they play, for the first time
live, one of their early classics: ‘Out of
Time’.
Sounds much like a
requiem. So let’s all sing, “Baby baby baby
/ you’re out of time”, as one Vladimir “it’s
a gas, gas, gas” Putin and his sidekick
Dmitry “Under My Thumb” Medvedev seem to be
the guys really getting their rocks off.
It’s only (BRICS) rock’n roll, but we like
it.
Pepe Escobar's
latest book is
2030. Follow him on
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