Will Seizure of Russian Assets Hasten Dollar
Decline?
By Ron Paul
June 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
While much of the world focused last week on whether or not the
Federal Reserve was going to raise interest rates, or whether the
Greek debt crisis would bring Europe to a crisis, the Permanent
Court of Arbitration in The Hague awarded a $50 billion judgment to
shareholders of the former oil company Yukos in their case against
the Russian government. The governments of Belgium and France moved
immediately to freeze Russian state assets in their countries,
naturally provoking the anger of the Russian government.
The timing of these actions is quite curious, coming as the Greek
crisis in the EU seems to be reaching a tipping point and Greece,
having perhaps abandoned the possibility of rapprochement with
Europe, has been making overtures to Russia to help bail it out of
its mess. And with the IMF's recent statement pledging its full and
unconditional support to Ukraine, it has become even more clear that
the IMF and other major multilateral institutions are not blindly
technical organizations, but rather are totally subservient lackeys
to the foreign policy agenda emanating from Washington. Toe the DC
party line and the internationalists will bail you out regardless of
how badly you mess up, but if you even think about talking to Russia
you will face serious consequences.
The United States government is desperately trying to cling to the
notion of a unipolar world, with the United States at its center
dictating foreign affairs and monetary policy while its client
states dutifully carry out instructions. But the world order is not
unipolar, and the existence of Russia and China is a stark reminder
of that. For decades, the United States has benefited as the creator
and defender of the world's reserve currency, the dollar. This has
enabled Americans to live beyond their means as foreign goods are
imported to the US while increasingly-worthless dollars are sent
abroad. But is it any wonder after 70-plus years of a depreciating
dollar that the rest of the world is rebelling against this massive
transfer of wealth?
The Europeans tried to form their own competitor to the dollar, and
the resulting euro is collapsing around them as you read this. But
the European Union was never considered much of a threat by the
United States, existing as it does within Washington's orbit. Russia
and China, on the other hand, pose a far more credible threat to the
dollar, as they have both the means and the motivation to form a
gold-backed alternative monetary system to compete against the
dollar. That is what the US government fears, and that is why
President Obama and his Western allies are risking a cataclysmic war
by goading Russia with these politically-motivated asset seizures.
Having run out of carrots, the US is resorting to the stick.
The US government knows that Russia will not blithely accept
Washington's dictates, yet it still reacts like a petulant child
flying into a tantrum whenever Russia dares to exert its
sovereignty. The existence of a country that won't kowtow to
Washington's demands is an unforgivable sin, to be punished with
economic sanctions, attempting to freeze Russia out of world
financial markets; veiled threats to strip Russia's hosting of the
2018 World Cup; and now the seizure of Russian state assets.
Thus far the Russian response has been incredibly restrained, but
that may not last forever. Continued economic pressure from the West
may very well necessitate a Sino-Russian monetary arrangement that
will eventually dethrone the dollar. The end result of this needless
bullying by the United States will hasten the one thing Washington
fears the most: a world monetary system in which the US has no say
and the dollar is relegated to playing second fiddle.
Copyright © 2015 by RonPaul Institute