Obama: TTIP
Necessary To Protect Megabanks From Prosecution
By Eric
Zuesse
May 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-On
May 7th, Deutsche Wirtschafts Nachrichten, or German
Economic News, headlined, “USA
planen mit TTIP Frontal-Angriff auf Gerichte in
Europa” or “U.S. Plans Frontal Attack on
Europe’s Courts via TTIP,” and reported that,
“America’s urgency to sign TTIP with Europe has
solid reason: Megabanks must protect themselves from
claims by European investors who allege that they
were cheated during the debt crisis. … The U.S.
Ambassador to Italy has now let the cat out of the
bag on this — probably unintentionally.”
In this
particular case, the megabank that’s being sued
isn’t American but German, Deutsche Bank, which the
U.S. Ambassador to Italy has cited as his example to
defend, perhaps so as to appeal to Germans to
protect their megabanks against lawsuits from
foreign investors (such as Italians) who complain.
In that case it was investors in the Italian city of
Trani, population 53,000. The smallness of the city
was an issue the Ambassador raised against the
suit’s having been brought there.
Reuters
headlined on May 6th, “Italian
prosecutor investigates Deutsche Bank over 2011 bond
sale”, and reported that, “An Italian prosecutor
is investigating Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) over its
sale of 7 billion euros ($8 billion) of Italian
government bonds five years ago, an investigative
source told Reuters. A prosecutor in Trani, a town
in southern Italy, is investigating because Deutsche
Bank allegedly told clients in a research note in
early 2011 that Italy’s public debt was no cause
for concern, and then sold almost 90 percent of its
own holding of the country’s bonds.” The U.S.
bond-rating agencies are also subjects in this suit,
because Trani had relied upon their ratings of those
bonds.
The Obama
Administration (through its Italian Ambassador)
seems thus to be saying, in effect, that unless TTIP
is passed into law, Europe’s megabanks (and the U.S.
bond-rating agencies, S&P, Moody’s and Fitch) will
be able successfully to be sued by cheated
investors, just as has been happening with such
American banks as JPMorgan/Chase and Goldman Sachs
in the United States, which — since TTIP hasn’t yet
been in force anywhere, including in the U.S. —
were forced to pay billions to cheated
investors. Apparently, Obama would be happier if
those suits had been impossible in the U.S. The
argument here, though only implicitly, seems to be
that TTIP is the way to protect megabanks and the
bond-rating firms. It concerns specifically the
selling of sophisticated derivative investments.
If this is
the argument behind the remarks by Obama’s Italian
Ambassador, John Phillips, he’s obliquely warning
Europeans that unless TTIP gets signed, their
megabanks might similarly be forced to pay billions
to investors who were cheated. As quoted by Reuters,
he said that, in the U.S., it’s “highly unlikely
that such a case would be brought outside the major
financial centers, where prosecutors have
both jurisdiction and expertise in securities fraud
prosecutions,” and that megabanks need the
protection that’s provided by such prosecutors,
since they possess “expertise in securities fraud
prosecutions.” Phillips was clearly implying that
small-city prosecutors (such as are allowed to
prosecute such cases in Europe) aren’t such
“experts,” as are needed in order to protect the
megabanks. Reuters characterizes Phillips’s argument
as asserting, “Italy’s justice system was deterring
investors.” However, no clarification of the meaning
of that statement was provided by Reuters.
DWN alleges
that under the TTIP such a court-issue would
probably not even have been raised but would simply
have ended before an arbitration panel, in which the
aggrieved investors exert no influence and where it
would be almost impossible for these investors’
rights to be protected.
Another example
is cited, where the German city of Pforzheim
successfully sued, at the Federal Court of Justice,
the U.S. megabank JPMorgan/Chase, and where that
court allowed Pforzheim to seek “accumulated damages
of 57 million euros.”
Under TTIP,
a megabank fined this way might in turn sue the
nation’s taxpayers to restore the megabank’s ensuing
loss of profits. If the cheated investors win,
taxpayers might thus end up bearing the cheated
investors’ losses. Under TTIP, the fined company
would be arguing that the law under which it had
been fined is in violation of TTIP and thus
constitutes a violation of that treaty, so that the
violating government is obliged to be paying the
fine — the law against fraud would itself be
violating the fined company’s rights. If the
three-arbitrator TTIP panel rules in the megabank’s
favor, the government would need to pay the fine it
had assessed against the bank, and no appeals court
exists for any of these arbitration-panels’ rulings
— these rulings are final. Obama and other
proponents of that system, which is called
ISDS for Investor State Dispute Settlement, say
that it’s a more efficient way of handling such
disputes. In international commercial affairs, it
not only eliminates appeals courts, it gradually
eliminates democracy, by fining the government into
ultimate submission to these three-person
panels of international-corporate-accountable
arbitrators.
On the
same basic idea, Benito
Mussolini was praised for “making the trains run
on time.”
Investigative historian Eric
Zuesse is
the author, most recently, of They’re
Not Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican
Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity. |