So far,
nothing spectacular. But then, a few days ago,
Kommersant leaked that Russia's Security Council
asked presidential aide Sergei Glazyev to come
up with a separate economic strategy, to be
presented to the council this week. This is not
exactly a novelty, as the Russian Security
Council in the past has asked small strategy
groups for their economic assessment.
The
Security Council is led by Nikolai Patrushev,
the former head of the Federal Security Service.
He and Siluanov are not exactly on the same
wavelength.
And here’s where the plot thickens. Glazyev, a
brilliant economist, is a Russian nationalist –
sanctioned personally by the US.
Glazyev
is arguably going no holds barred. He is in
favor of barring Russian companies from using
foreign currency (which makes sense); taxing the
conversion of rubles to foreign currencies
(same); banning foreign loans to Russian firms
(depending if they are not in US dollars or
euro); and – the smoking gun - requiring Russian
companies that have Western loans to default.
Predictably, some sectors of US ‘Think Tankland’
went bonkers, stating with utmost certainty that
“the Russian energy sector would not be able
to find much financing without connections to
the West.” Nonsense. Russian firms would
easily find financing from Chinese, Japanese or
South Korean sources.
Whatever measure of attention Glazyev will get
inside the Kremlin, the whole episode already
means that Moscow harbors no illusions in the
near future regarding the exceptionalists (one
just has to look at the presidential candidates,
from ‘El Trumpissimo’ to ‘The Hillarator’); as
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
recently put it, "[we] should expect
toughening of the sanctions pressure."
Once thing though is absolutely certain; Moscow
won’t bend over backwards to “pacify”
Washington.
Neo-Tsarism,
anyone?
One
might be tempted to see Glazyev drawing up plans
to return to some sort of Tsarist
self-sufficiency while cutting off ties with the
West. Assuming some version of that would be
approved by the Kremlin, what’s certain is that
it may turn into a huge blow the EU might not
recover from.
Imagine
Russia defaulting on all its foreign debt - over
$700 billion – on which Western sanctions have
raised extra, punitive costs in terms of
repayment.
The
default would be payback for the twin Western
manipulation of oil prices and the ruble. The
manipulation involved unleashing on the oil
market over five million barrels a day of excess
reserve production that were held back by a few
usual suspects, plus derivative manipulation at
the NYMEX, crashing the price.
Then,
the derivative manipulation of the ruble crashed
the currency. Almost all imports to Russia were
virtually blocked – as oil and natural gas
exports remained constant. In the long run
though, this should create a significant balance
of trade surplus for Russia; a very positive
factor for long-term growth of Russia’s domestic
industry.
Vladimir Yakunin, the former head of Russian
Railways, now out due to a reshuffle, recently
told AP in no uncertain terms how the aim of US
sanctions was to cut off Russia economically
from Europe.
Sanctions, coupled with speculation on oil and
the ruble, pushed the Russian economy into
recession in 2015. Yakunin, like most of the
economic/business elite, expect Russia’s
economic troubles to last at least until 2017.
Currently the only products that the West needs
from Russia are oil and natural gas. A possible
Russian default on its debt would have no effect
on that demand in the short-term; and most
probably in the long-term as well, unless it
would contribute to a new financial crisis in
the West, something that nearly happened in
1998.
We all
remember August 1998, when a Russian default
shook the entire Western financial system to the
core. If a Russian default is now the object of
serious consideration by the highest powers that
be – and that includes, of course, the FSB, SVR,
GRU - then the specter of The Mother of All
Financial Crisis in the West is back. And for
the EU, that would be fatal.
It’s your fault
we can’t loot
Enter
Iran. The lifting of sanctions on Iran –
arguably by early 2016 – ultimately has nothing
to do with the nuclear dossier. It’s a
‘Pipelineistan Great Game’, as in having
everything to do with oil and natural gas.
The US
– and EU – wet dream remains to replace Russia
with Iran in terms of natural gas and oil
imports to the EU. Every serious analyst knows
this might take at least a decade, and over $200
billion in investment; not to mention Gazprom
would fight it with the formidable – commercial
– weapons in its arsenal.
At the
same time Western financial powers in the New
York-London axis did not anticipate that Moscow
would not bow down and accept their demands that
Putin lay off Ukraine - so that they could loot
Ukraine’s mostly agricultural lands at will.
They obviously didn’t learn from history; Putin
also did not back off when he stopped them from
looting Russia.
So the
entire, sorrowful Kiev episode, as much as an
infinite NATO expansion gambit, was also an
attempt to stop Putin from preventing the
Western looting of Ukraine.
What we
had as a result was a tectonic geopolitical
shift; the reconfiguration of the entire world
balance of power as Russia and China deepened
their strategic partnership - based on a mutual
external threat coming mostly from the US, with
the EU as accessories. Russian intelligence very
well knows the alliance now makes Russia and
China invulnerable, whereas separately they
could easily fall victim to trademark Divide and
Rule.
As for
the counter-NATO angle, Russia has had plenty of
time to remilitarize, focusing on defensive and
offensive missiles; the key to the next major
war, and not obsolete US aircraft carriers.
Russian defensive missiles such as the
state-of-the-art S-500 and the offensive Topol M
- each with ten MIRVs - can easily neutralize
whatever the Pentagon may have in store.
After
Russia, Western financial ‘Masters of the
Universe’ went after China for allying with
Russia. The usual financial suspects rigged the
Chinese stock market in an attempt to crash the
economy, using Wall Street proxies manipulating
cash settlement mechanisms to first raise up the
prices of the Chinese A shares, creating a giant
boom, and then reversing the cash settlement rig
to crash the market.
No
wonder Beijing, very much aware of what was
happening massively intervened; is actively
studying cash settlement moves; and is carefully
reviewing the records of major stock operators
in China.
Round up those
central bank suspects
The
Kremlin’s got to do something about the Russian
Central Bank.
The
Russian Central Bank kept interest rates high,
forcing Russian oil and natural gas producers to
finance their operations from Western sources,
and thereby plunging the Russian economy into a
debt trap.
These
loans to Russia were part of the New York-London
financier axis control mechanism. Were Moscow to
“disobey” the West, the West would call in their
loans after crashing the ruble, making repayment
almost impossible, as they did with Iran.
This is
the mechanism through which the West – and its
institutions, the IMF, World Bank, BIS, the
whole gang – rule. Beijing is moving either to
complement or replace this set-up with new and
more democratic international institutions.
If the
Russian Central Bank had operated under sounder
principles, it would have lent money at interest
rates below the West’s, and linked each loan to
productive investment. A modus operandi totally
different from the US - where much of the
central bank credit goes to banks and financiers
for their speculative scams.
Michael
Hudson, among others, has already made the case
that the entire Fed only serves the interest of
its financial rulers and does not give a damn
about American industrial infrastructure, which
was progressively shifted to colonies and/or
vassals, as well as to China.
So the
‘Masters of the Universe’ thought hardcore
pressure on both Russia and then China would
work. It did not. There are reasons to be
alarmed; the ‘Masters of the Universe’ will keep
raising the ante, higher and higher.
The
scenario ahead spells out Russia further moving
east while simultaneously moving to extricate
itself from most of the West’s institutional
architecture.
The merger of the China-driven New Silk Roads,
a.k.a. One Belt, One Road and the Russia-led
Eurasian Economic Union, although slow and full
of pitfalls, is irreversible. It’s in their
mutual interest to invest and develop a
pan-Eurasian emporium.
Iranian
natural gas will go mostly to the Asian part of
Eurasia, and not the EU. And the Chinese economy
will at least triple over the next fifteen years
as the US continues to de-industrialize.
Whatever Putin and Obama discuss at their
possible meeting at the end of the month in New
York, exceptionalist pressure over the bear
won’t abate. So it pays for the bear to keep a
lethal financial weapon in storage.