Planet of
Fear
By Pepe
Escobar
January 19, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"SCF"
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Facing the
gleaming Doha skyline on a Persian Gulf winter
carries the merit of a panoramic perspective. Most
nations around it are going into melt down and the
remaining ones – with the exception of Iran –
exhibit neither the political leadership nor the
economic and institutional infrastructure to do
anything other than to meekly accept whatever
tsunami hits their shores. They are nothing but
scared spectators.
The Empire
of Chaos has enough warmongering hardware
pre-positioned within spitting distance to turn the
whole of Southwest Asia into ashes – as a gaggle of
usual suspects in the Beltway, neocon or
neoliberalcon, still can’t find a cure to their
itching to «really win the next war» in a sort of
exponential Shock and Awe.
Fear reigns
supreme. Jim Rickards, the author of Currency
Wars, economist and CIA asset, has just
released a new book, The Big Drop, with a
pretty grim message. For his part Jim
Rogers, a.k.a. the «Sage of Singapore», most of
the time China-bound informing the Chinese elite
where to place their investments, holds on to a
nuanced perspective on the West blaming all the
current global economy turmoil on China.
According to Rogers, «yes,
China is slowing. But mostly the world is doing so.
Japan, one of China’s largest trading partners is
officially in recession. Much of Europe is worse.
The US stock market was down in 2015 while the
Chinese stock market was one of the strongest in the
world».
Rogers adds, «things are
going to get worse worldwide so everyone will suffer
and is to ‘blame’. The original source is the US
Federal Reserve and its ludicrous, artificial
interest rates caused by massive money printing
which the world has copied. Throw in staggering debt
increases by the US government [which the world has
also copied] and there will soon be hell to pay».
So no
wonder apocalyptic war rumors are the new normal –
even as old timers boost their case for «only» a
«good old-fashioned world war», as if nuclear
exchanges wouldn’t be part of the equation. A few
sound minds in the Atlanticist axis worry that if Il
Duce Trump wins the next US presidential election,
that translates into guaranteed bankruptcy for the
US, and – what else – war if Il Trumpissimo
implements half of what he’s boasting about.
Short all the oil you can
The Davos
annual talkfest is about to begin; that’s one of
those occasions when the Masters of the Universe –
who usually decide everything behind closed doors –
send their minions to «debate» the future of their
holdings. The current debate centers on whether we
are still in the midst of the Third – digitalized – Industrial
Revolution and the Internet of Things or whether
we’re already entering the Fourth.
In the real
world though all the cackle is about the age of
old-fashioned oil. Which brings us to the myriad
effects of the cheap oil strategy deployed by the
House of Saud under Washington’s command.
Persian
Gulf traders, off the record, are adamant that there
is no longer any real global oil surplus of
consequence as all shut-in oil has been dumped on
the market based on that Washington command.
Petroleum
Intelligence Weekly estimates the surplus is at a
maximum 2.2 million a day, plus 600,000 barrels a
day coming from Iran later this year. The US
consumption of oil – at 19,840,000 barrels a day,
20% of world production – has not increased; it’s
the other 80% that have been mostly absorbing the
dumped oil.
Some key
Persian Gulf traders are adamant that oil should be
surging by the second half of 2016. That explains
why Russia is not panicking with oil plunging
towards $30 a barrel. Moscow is very much aware of
the «partners» that are carrying oil market
manipulation against Russia, and at the same time is
anticipating this won’t last too long.
That
explains why Russia's Deputy Finance Minister Maxim
Oreshkin issued a
sort of «keep calm and carry on» message; he expects
oil prices to remain in the $40-60 range for at
least the next seven years, and Russia can live with
that.
The Masters
of the Universe – just like the Russians – have
realized their oil manipulation cannot last.
Hysteria, predictably, took over. That’s why they
ordered major Wall Street firms to short oil using
cash settlement. Compliant US corporate media was
ordered to spin the shortfalls will last forever.
The target is to drive down the price of a barrel of
oil to $7 if possible.
The
original Masters of the Universe strategy would
eventually lead to regime change in Russia and the
usual oligarch suspects back in the saddle
re-conducting the massive looting operation Russia
suffered during the 1990s.
A fearful
House of Saud is a mere pawn in this strategy.
Assuming the plan would work, the House of Saud
under – virtually demented – King Salman, now
confined to a room in his Riyadh palace, would also
be regime-changed, via Saudi military officers
trained in the West and recruited by Western agents.
As a bonus, the Islamic Republic of Iran would also
collapse, with «moderates» (rebels?) taking control.
So the
Masters of the Universe strategy essentially boils
down to regime-change in Russia, Iran and Saudi
Arabia, leading to Exceptionalistan-friendly
elites/vassals; in sum, the ultimate chapter in the
global Resource Wars. Yet what this is yielding so
far is the House of Saud having absolutely no clue
of what may happen to them; Riyadh royals may think
that they are undermining both Iran and Russia, but
in the end they may be only accelerating their own
demise.
Losing my religion
In Europe,
it’s as if we’re back to 1977 when The Stranglers
sang No More Heroes. Now, no more heroes and no more
ideals. Even as some of European youth’s best and
brightest have tried to fight the immense violence
of neoliberalism, via alter-globalization, the
poorest among the young are now mired in violence
and suicidal nihilism – extreme Wahhabism which
they've learned online. Yet this has nothing to do
with Islam, and it’s not a war of religion, as
myriad extreme-right parties across Europe routinely
insist.
All across
the spectrum, driven by fear, the toxic mix of
political and economic instability continues to
spread, leading quite a few insiders to wonder
whether both the Fed and the Politburo Standing
Committee in Beijing don't really know what’s
happening.
And that
once again feeds the warmongering hordes, for which
that «good old-fashioned world war» is the easiest
ticket out. Cancel all the old debt; issue loads of
new debt; turn ploughshares and iPhones into
cannons. And after a little thermonuclear exchange,
welcome to full employment and a new (waste)land of
opportunity.
It’s in
this context that, under the volcano, surfaces an
essay by Guido Preparata, an Italian-American
political economist now based as a scholar in the
Vatican. In The Political Economy of
Hyper-Modernity, soon to appear in an anthology
published by Palgrave/Macmillan, Preparata offers an
account of the last 70 years of US/international
monetary dynamics/history by using a single
indicator: the overall US balance of payments –
which has not been released since 1975.
Yet the
most important conclusion in the essay seems to be
that «the neoliberal engine, which has had to
run mostly on domestic fuel, has shown… appreciable
resilience». The US Treasury and the Federal
Reserve, «together» managed to erect a «wall of
money».
And yet «US
technocrats seem to have grown disillusioned with
the neoliberal machine». So, «as a
momentous alternative, the technocrats have called
for some kind of ‘global rebalancing’». The
US-led system «seems to be transitioning to a
neo-mercantilist regime». And the answer is the TPP
(The Trans-Pacific Partnership) and the TTIP (The
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership)
trade agreements that, together, «will place the
United States at the center of an open trade zone
representing around two-thirds of global economic
output».
This would
imply, ultimately, a sort of Make Trade, Not War
endgame. So why so much fear? That’s because in the
internal battle raging among the Masters of the
Universe, the freewheeling neoliberalcons have not
yet imprinted the last word. So beware the Falcons
of War.
Pepe
Escobar is an independent geopolitical analyst
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