September 02/3, 2023 -
Information Clearing House
- "Unz
Review"
Question 1–
To what extent has the war in Ukraine
accelerated the move to a new global
realignment?
Paul Craig
Roberts– It was Washington’s
economic sanctions against Russia, the
theft of Russia’s central bank reserves,
and the theft of Venezuela’s gold, not
the conflict in Ukraine, that weaponized
the US dollar and resulted in global
realignment.
The limited
Russian intervention in Donbas was
Putin’s belated eight-year-delayed
response to the US coup that overthrew
the government of Ukraine in 2014 and
installed a government hostile to Russia
and to the Russian population that had
been incorporated into the Ukraine
province of the Soviet Union by Soviet
leaders. The intervention was forced
on Putin by the United States’ buildup
of a large Ukraine army poised to
overthrow the self-declared Donbas
republics.
By habit and
convenience, the US dollar is used as
world money to settle imbalances in
international trade, but the
sanctions woke the world up to the risks
of using the dollar. Consequently,
the BRICS suddenly expanded with
membership extended to Argentina, Egypt,
Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates. The organization now
contains essentially the entirety of
world oil production and 40-45% of World
GDP.
Clearly, a
realignment has already occurred.
Question 2–
Iran, Saudi Arabia and UAE have now all
joined BRICS. How will this affect the
dollar’s role as the world’s reserve
currency? (Is this the end of the
petrodollar??)
Paul Craig
Roberts– Saudi Arabia announced the
end of the petrodollar when it began
accepting payment for oil in other
currencies. The BRICS are working out
how-to carry-on trade among themselves
without use of the US dollar, which in
effect brings to an end the role of the
dollar as world reserve currency.
The BRICS
might try to create a new reserve
currency consisting of a weighted basket
of their currencies. This is unnecessary
and could lead to strains among BRICS
members from disputes over the shares of
each currency in the basket. A
reserve currency is no longer needed.
A reserve currency was needed at the
end of WWII because the other
industrialized economies were destroyed.
As the US had the only intact economy,
the role fell to the US dollar. Today
this is not the situation. Central
banks can keep their reserves in the
form of the currencies of their trading
partners.
What this means
for Washington is that the US will
begin having financing problems for its
large budget and trade deficits. As
long as the dollar was the world money,
foreign central banks kept their
reserves in US Treasury debt. As US
budget and trade deficits grew, so did
the reserves of the world banking
system.
The situation is
changing. If a dozen countries
constituting about half of the world’s
population and 40-45% of world GDP cease
using the dollar, the foreign central
bank market for US debt shrinks
considerably. Having offshored its
manufacturing, the US is
import-dependent. Declining use of
the dollar means a declining supply of
customers for US debt, which means
pressure on the dollar’s exchange value
and the prospect of rising inflation
from rising prices of imports.
Question 3–
Can Washington allow this realignment to
stand or should we expect to see a
coup in Saudi Arabia where the US has
five military bases and numerous CIA
offices?
Paul Craig
Roberts– I do not know if Washington
has the ability to overthrow the Saudi
government or whether Russia, China, and
Iran would permit it. Remember,
President Obama was going to overthrow
Assad in Syria, but Putin did not permit
it.
Question 4–
The globalist dreams of the western
oligarchs (WEF) appear to be coming to
an end along with the so-called
“rules-based order”. In your opinion,
how important has Vladimir Putin been in
spearheading the move towards a “new
architecture for global security” and
laying the groundwork for a new
multipolar world order?
Paul Craig
Roberts– What broke up Washington’s
version of global order was the West’s
cold shoulder to Putin’s effort to be a
part of the world order on equal
standing and not in a subservient
position. It was Washington’s
arrogance and foolishness that broke up
the global order.
Question 5–
Before he died, national security
advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski warned
that the US would need to seek an
accommodation with Russia and China to
ease the transition away from the
unipolar system. Here’s what he
said:
“As its era
of global dominance ends, the
United States needs to take the lead
in realigning the global power
architecture… the United States
is still the world’s politically,
economically, and militarily most
powerful entity but, given complex
geopolitical shifts in regional
balances, i t is no longer the
globally imperial power….
the United
States must take the lead in
realigning the global power
architecture in such a way that
the violence …can be contained
without destroying the global
order.…
a long and
painful road toward an initially
limited regional accommodation is
the only viable option for the
United States, Russia, China,
and the pertinent Middle Eastern
entities. For the United States,
that will require patient
persistence in forging cooperative
relationships with some new partners
(particularly Russia and China)…
The fact is
that there has never been a truly
“dominant” global power until the
emergence of America on the world
scene…. During the latter part of
the 20th century no other power even
came close. That era is now ending.
Toward a Global Realignment,
Zbigniew Brzezinski, The American
Interest
In your
opinion, how should the United States
deal with Moscow and Beijing? Is
there a way that we can defend US
interests while –at the same time–
avoiding years of conflict and
confrontation? What should our foreign
policy objectives be?
Paul Craig
Roberts– The neoconservatives’ goal
of US hegemony prevents Washington from
hearing Brzezinski’s advice.
Washington’s chance to deal with Russia
and China has passed. The question we
face is how will Russia and China deal
with Washington. The neoconservative
monopoly on US foreign policy means that
there are no other voices for Washington
to hear, and American hegemony is out of
the question.