In a televised nationwide address on August 5,
Obama said: “Congressional rejection
of this deal leaves any US administration that is absolutely
committed to preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon with
one option: another war in the Middle East. I say this not to be
provocative. I am stating a fact.”
The American Congress is due to vote on whether to accept the
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action signed July 14 between Iran
and the P5+1 group of world powers – the US, Britain, France,
Germany, Russia and China. Republicans are openly vowing to
reject the JCPOA, along with hawkish Democrats such as Senator
Chuck Schumer. Opposition within the Congress may even be enough
to override a presidential veto to push through the nuclear
accord.
In his drastic prediction of war, one might
assume that Obama is referring to Israel launching a preemptive
military strike on Iran with the backing of US Republicans. Or
that he is insinuating that Iran will walk from self-imposed
restraints on its nuclear program to build a bomb, thus
triggering a war.
But what could really be behind Obama’s dire
warning of “deal or war” is another scenario – the
collapse of the US dollar, and with that the implosion of the US
economy.
That scenario was hinted at this week by US
Secretary of State John Kerry. Speaking in New York on August
11, Kerry made the candid admission that failure to seal the
nuclear deal could result in the US dollar losing its status as
the top international reserve currency.
“If we turn around and nix the deal and
then tell [US allies], ‘You're going to have to obey our rules
and sanctions anyway,’ that is a recipe, very quickly for the
American dollar to cease to be the reserve currency of the
world.”
In other words, what really concerns the Obama
administration is that the sanctions regime it has crafted on
Iran – and has compelled other nations to abide by over the past
decade – will be finished. And Iran will be open for business
with the European Union, as well as China and Russia.
It is significant that within days of signing
the Geneva accord, Germany, France, Italy and other EU
governments hastened to Tehran to begin lining up lucrative
investment opportunities in Iran’s prodigious oil and gas
industries. China and Russia are equally well-placed and more
than willing to resume trading partnerships with Iran. Russia
has signed major deals to expand Iran’s nuclear energy industry.
American writer Paul Craig Roberts said that
the US-led sanctions on Iran and also against Russia have
generated a lot of frustration and resentment among Washington’s
European allies.
“US sanctions against Iran and Russia have
cost businesses in other countries a lot of money,”
Roberts told this author.
“Propaganda about the Iranian nuke threat
and Russian threat is what caused other countries to cooperate
with the sanctions. If a deal worked out over much time by the
US, Russia, China, UK, France and Germany is blocked, other
countries are likely to cease cooperating with US sanctions.”
Roberts added that if Washington were to
scuttle the nuclear accord with Iran, and then demand a return
to the erstwhile sanctions regime, the other international
players will repudiate the American diktat.
“At that point, I think much of the world
would have had enough of the US use of the international
payments system to dictate to others, and they would cease
transacting in dollars.”
The US dollar would henceforth lose its status
as the key global reserve currency for the conduct of
international trade and financial transactions.
Former World Bank analyst Peter Koenig says
that if the nuclear accord unravels, Iran will be free to trade
its oil and gas – worth trillions of dollars – in bilateral
currency deals with the EU, Japan, India, South Korea, China and
Russia, in much the same way that China and Russia and other
members of the BRICS nations have already begun to do so.
That outcome will further undermine the US
dollar. It will gradually become redundant as a mechanism of
international payment.
Koenig argues that this implicit threat to the
dollar is the real, unspoken cause for anxiety in Washington.
The long-running dispute with Iran, he contends, was never about
alleged weapons of mass destruction. Rather, the real motive was
for Washington to preserve the dollar’s unique global standing.
“The US-led standoff with Iran has nothing
to do with nuclear weapons,” says
Koenig. The issue is: will Iran
eventually sell its huge reserves of hydrocarbons in other
currencies than the dollar, as they intended to do in 2007 with
an Iranian Oil Bourse? That is what instigated the
American-contrived fake nuclear issue in the first place.”
This is not just about Iran. It is about other
major world economies moving away from holding the US dollar as
a means of doing business. If the US unilaterally scuppers the
international nuclear accord, Washington will no longer be able
to enforce its financial hegemony, which the sanctions regime on
Iran has underpinned.
Many analysts have long wondered at how the US
dollar has managed to defy economic laws, given that its
preeminence as the world’s reserve currency is no longer merited
by the fundamentals of the US economy. Massive indebtedness,
chronic unemployment, loss of manufacturing base, trade and
budget deficits are just some of the key markers, despite
official claims of “recovery.”
As Paul Craig Roberts commented, the dollar’s
value has only been maintained because up to now the rest of the
world needs the greenback to do business with. That dependency
has allowed the US Federal Reserve to keep printing banknotes in
quantities that are in no way commensurate with the American
economy’s decrepit condition.
“If the dollar lost the reserve currency
status, US power would decline,” says
Roberts. “Washington’s financial
hegemony, such as the ability to impose sanctions, would vanish,
and Washington would no longer be able to pay its bills by
printing money. Moreover, the loss of reserve currency status
would mean a drop in the demand for dollars and a drop in
willingness to hold them. Therefore, the dollar’s exchange value
would fall, and rising prices of imports would import inflation
into the US economy.”
Doug Casey, a top American investment analyst,
last week warned that the woeful state of the US economy means
that the dollar is teetering on the brink of a long-overdue
crash. “You’re going to see very high levels of inflation.
It’s going to be quite catastrophic,” says Casey.
He added that the crash will also presage a
collapse in the American banking system which is carrying
trillions of dollars of toxic debt derivatives, at levels much
greater than when the system crashed in 2007-08.
The picture he painted isn’t pretty: “Now,
when interest rates inevitably go up from these artificially
suppressed levels where they are now, the bond market is going
to collapse, the stock market is going to collapse, and with it,
the real estate market is going to collapse. Pension funds are
going to be wiped out… This is a very bad situation. The US is
digging itself in deeper and deeper,” said Casey, who added
the telling question: “Then what’s
going to happen?”
President Obama’s grim warning of “deal or
war” seems to provide an answer. Faced with economic implosion
on an epic scale, the US may be counting on war as its other
option.