Financial
Collapse Leads To War
By
Dmitry Orlov
[Финансовый
крах приводит к войне]
[Les
US échoueront même à échouer]
[Il
crollo finanziario che conduce alla
guerra]
January 12,
2016 -
"ClubOrlov"
-
[This is a
rerun from March of last year, whose time has
finally come. With the new year, a sea change seems
to have occurred in the financial markets: instead
of “melting up,” the way they used to, they have
started “melting down.” My original prediction is
that this will lead to more armed conflict. Let's
see if I was right.]
Scanning the headlines in the western mainstream
press, and then peering behind the one-way mirror to
compare that to the actual goings-on, one can't but
get the impression that America's propagandists, and
all those who follow in their wake, are struggling
with all their might to concoct rationales for
military action of one sort or another, be it
supplying weapons to the largely defunct Ukrainian
military, or staging parades of US military hardware
and troops in the almost completely Russian town of
Narva, in Estonia, a few hundred meters away from
the Russian border, or putting US “advisers” in
harm's way in parts of Iraq mostly controlled by
Islamic militants.
The strenuous efforts to whip up Cold War-like
hysteria in the face of an otherwise preoccupied and
essentially passive Russia seems out of all
proportion to the actual military threat Russia
poses. (Yes, volunteers and ammo do filter into
Ukraine across the Russian border, but that's about
it.) Further south, the efforts to topple the
government of Syria by aiding and arming Islamist
radicals seem to be backfiring nicely. But that's
the pattern, isn't it? What US military involvement
in recent memory hasn't resulted in a fiasco?
Maybe failure is not just an option, but more of a
requirement?
Let's review. Afghanistan, after the longest
military campaign in US history, is being handed
back to the Taliban. Iraq no longer exists as a
sovereign nation, but has fractured into three
pieces, one of them controlled by radical Islamists.
Egypt has been democratically reformed into a
military dictatorship. Libya is a defunct state in
the middle of a civil war. The Ukraine will soon be
in a similar state; it has been reduced to pauper
status in record time—less than a year. A recent
government overthrow has caused Yemen to stop being
US-friendly. Closer to home, things are going so
well in the US-dominated Central American countries
of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador that they
have produced a flood of refugees, all trying to get
into the US in the hopes of finding any sort of
sanctuary.
Looking at this broad landscape of failure, there
are two ways to interpret it. One is that the US
officialdom is the most incompetent one imaginable,
and can't ever get anything right. But another is
that they do not succeed for a distinctly different
reason: they don't succeed because results don't
matter. You see, if failure were a problem, then
there would be some sort of pressure coming from
somewhere or other within the establishment, and
that pressure to succeed might sporadically give
rise to improved performance, leading to at least a
few instances of success. But if in fact failure is
no problem at all, and if instead there was some
sort of pressure to fail, then we would see exactly
what we do see.
In fact, a point can be made that it is the limited
scope of failure that is the problem. This would
explain the recent saber-rattling in the direction
of Russia, accusing it of imperial ambitions (Russia
is not interested in territorial gains), demonizing
Vladimir Putin (who is effective and popular) and
behaving provocatively along Russia's various
borders (leaving Russia vaguely insulted but
generally unconcerned). It can be argued that all
the previous victims of US foreign
policy—Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, even the
Ukraine—are too small to produce failure writ large
enough to satisfy America's appetite for failure.
Russia, on the other hand, especially when
incentivized by thinking that it is standing up to
some sort of new, American-style fascism, has the
ability to deliver to the US a foreign policy
failure that will dwarf all the previous ones.
Analysts have proposed a variety of explanations for
America's hyperactive, oversized militarism. Here
are the top three:
1. The US government has been captured by the
military-industrial complex, which demands to be
financed lavishly. Rationales are created
artificially to achieve that result. But there does
seem to be some sort of pressure to actually make
weapons and field armies, because wouldn't it be far
more cost-effective to achieve full-spectrum failure
simply by stealing all the money and skip building
the weapons systems altogether? So something else
must be going on.
2. The US military posture is designed to insure
America's full spectrum dominance over the entire
planet. But “full-spectrum dominance” sounds a
little bit like “success,” whereas what we see is
full-spectrum failure. Again, this story doesn't fit
the facts.
3. The US acts militarily to defend the status of
the US dollar as the global reserve currency. But
the US dollar is slowly but surely losing its
attractiveness as a reserve currency, as witnessed
by China and Russia acting as swiftly as they can to
unload their US dollar reserves, and to stockpile
gold instead. Numerous other nations have entered
into arrangements with each other to stop using the
US dollar in international trade. The fact of the
matter is, it doesn't take a huge military to flush
one's national currency down the toilet, so, once
again, something else must be going on.
There are many other explanations on offer as well,
but none of them explain the fact that the goal of
all this militarism seems to be to achieve failure.
Perhaps a simpler explanation would suffice? How
about this one:
The US has surrendered its sovereignty to a clique
of financial oligarchs. Having nobody at all to
answer to, this American (and to some extent
international) oligarchy has been ruining the
financial condition of the country, running up
staggering levels of debt, destroying savings and
retirements, debasing the currency and so on. The
inevitable end-game is that the Federal Reserve
(along with the central banks of other “developed
economies”) will end up buying up all the sovereign
debt issuance with money they print for that
purpose, and in the end this inevitably leads to
hyperinflation and national bankruptcy. A very
special set of conditions has prevented these two
events from taking place thus far, but that doesn't
mean that they won't, because that's what always
happens, sooner or later.
Now, let's suppose a financial oligarchy has seized
control of the country, and, since it can't control
its own appetites, is running it into the ground.
Then it would make sense for it to have some sort of
back-up plan for when the whole financial house of
cards falls apart. Ideally, this plan would
effectively put down any chance of revolt of the
downtrodden masses, and allow the oligarchy to
maintain security and hold onto its wealth.
Peacetime is fine for as long as it can placate the
populace with bread and circuses, but when a
financial calamity causes the economy to crater and
bread and circuses turn scarce, a handy fallback is
war.
Any rationale for war will do, be it terrorists
foreign and domestic, Big Bad Russia, or
hallucinated space aliens. Military success is
unimportant, because failure is even better than
success for maintaining order because it makes it
possible to force through various emergency security
measures. Various training runs, such as the
military occupation of Boston following the staged
bombings at the Boston Marathon, have already taken
place. The surveillance infrastructure and the
partially privatized prison-industrial complex are
already in place for locking up the undesirables. A
really huge failure would provide the best rationale
for putting the economy on a war footing, imposing
martial law, suppressing dissent, outlawing
“extremist” political activity and so on.
And so perhaps that is what we should expect.
Financial collapse is already baked in, and it's
only a matter of time before it happens, and
precipitates commercial collapse when global supply
chains stop functioning. Political collapse will be
resisted, and the way it will be resisted is by
starting as many wars as possible, to produce a vast
backdrop of failure to serve as a rationale for all
sorts of “emergency measures,” all of which will
have just one aim: to suppress rebellion and to keep
the oligarchy in power. Outside the US, it will look
like Americans blowing things up: countries, things,
innocent bystanders, even themselves (because, you
know, apparently that works too). From the outside
looking into America's hall of one-way mirrors, it
will look like a country gone mad; but then it
already looks that way. And inside the hall of
one-way mirrors it will look like valiant defenders
of liberty battling implacable foes around the
world. Most people will remain docile and just wave
their little flags.
But I would venture to guess that at some point
failure will translate into meta-failure: America
will fail even at failing. I hope that there is
something we can do to help this meta-failure of
failure happen sooner rather than later.
Dmitry
Orlov
was born in Leningrad and immigrated to the United
States in the 1970’s. He is the author of
Reinventing Collapse, Hold Your Applause! and
Absolutely Positive, and publishes weekly at the
phenomenally popular blog
www.ClubOrlov.com
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