Dr. Paul Craig Roberts: ‘World Moving Away From American Financial Hegemony’

‘World moving away from American financial hegemony’ (RT, May 22, 2014):

With the China-Russia deal conducted outside the dollar system we see the beginning of the de-dollarization and de-Americanization of the world, former assistant Secretary of the Treasury Paul Craig Roberts told RT.

RT: A number of Western businesspeople have boycotted the St. Petersburg economic forum. Are they going to lose out?

Paul Craig Roberts: I think it is just a symbolic way of accommodating Washington. I don’t think it means anything, I do not think the firms in Germany, for example, want to harm the relationships with Russia, nor do they want it in France. So I do not think it means much. What is much more significant is that the number of Asian countries that are coming to this forum, and energy deal signed by Russia and China, is an indication that the world will be moving away from American financial hegemony.

This large energy deal will be conducted outside the dollar system, so here is the beginning of the de-dollarization, the beginning of the de-Americanization. This is an indication that the two large countries, Russia and China, are forming a strategic alliance because they are tired of being harassed and cut out of the Western mechanisms, they are tired of the threats. So they are moving in a new direction, and they will take much of the world with them. I do not think the European countries that have strong economic relations with Russia will want to lose those.

This is a beginning of a turn from Russia toward the East. Previously Russia was focused on being accepted by the West, being accepted by the Americans. It waited for years to be allowed to join the WTO. I think this was a mistake on Russia’s part because the West is not the rising part of the world. The rising part of the world is the East.

RT: Pressure from Washington may account for some business figures not going to the forum, but are there other reasons too?

PR: They have made it for that reason, if there are opportunities that they could have made there, if they are not present they cannot make the deals. In that sense it is a bad decision. I do not know how many countries actually decided not to come. I think in a way the American credit card companies were hurt by the sanctions that Washington kept talking about because this has now forced Russia to develop its own credit card companies, which it should have done a long time ago.

It has always been a mystery to me that economically stable countries continue to operate within the American financial system. They are dependent on American credit card companies, for example. They are dependent on American internet companies, which simply allows the NSA to spy on them better. Why do they accept such dependence on American economic institutions? I have never understood. I think in a sense these developments are good for Russia because it means it is now developing its own infrastructure and will not be dependent on Washington’s infrastructure for communications, for finance, for credit. So this development is good for Russia, it is not good for Washington.

RT: A lot of people are expected to come from Asia for the forum. Can we expect any major trade deals between Russia and that part of the world?

PR: I would think so. I mean all countries need energy and all countries are getting tired of Western bullying. Western machinations, the air of superiority over the world that Washington has. It was not long ago that President Obama declared that the US was the exceptional country. That means we come first, you are second. Other people do not like thinking of themselves as second class, so I think that this is the beginning of transformation that has been long implicit in the organization known as BRICS. That is starting to form up and be a real thing.

RT: Do you think there’s genuine concern from the West over growing ties between Russia and China?

PR: Yes, there is very much concern. The American foreign policy doctrine calls Washington to prevent the rise of other global powers. So now it is confronted not just with two rising global powers, but these two powers have a mutual alliance and both understand that Washington is surrounding them with military bases. Washington has land bases in the Baltics, in the Eastern Europe; possibly they are going to be in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine. And China is confronted with new American naval and air bases positioned to control the flow of ships through the South China sea. So both countries see that Washington has in mind hemming them in, preventing their rise and they are forming a strategic alliance because the two are stronger together than independently. And this worries Washington very much.

I think it has overreached, it should have accepted the Russian cooperation, it should not have seen the rise of China as some kind of the threat. But it made mistake in demonizing both countries and it is trying to operate in the ways that prevent or slow the rise of these two countries. So this is a very serious situation for the world because it has the implication of a serious war.

2 thoughts on “Dr. Paul Craig Roberts: ‘World Moving Away From American Financial Hegemony’”

  1. When they announced it as a new event last week, I was surprised, because they set that trade agreement into place in November of 2010, not last week. But, upon reflection, they were wise to wait until they had recruited better than half the world to their program.
    It was initially started by Hugo Chavez when he was head of the South American Trade Alliance, a group of tiny nations, including Cuba. Their entire GDP was around $500 million, so it flew under the radar of the US.
    He introduced the first electronic currency, the Sucre, in Summer of 2010. It allowed member nations to trade with each other using their own currencies, leaving the dollar out.
    The Sucre would translate the value of each currency at the time of transaction, making the need for conversion to any other currency obsolete.
    Russia and China were so impressed by its success, that it adopted it in November of that year. China went on to recruit Turkey, other middle east nations, South and Central American nations, emerging African economies to their system. When the US put more fool sanctions on Iran, now a member of their organization, Japan and India joined with them.
    Iran, despite the lies of US media, is a very rich country, and most of the world finds them a fruitful and healthy trading partner.
    All of these nations are emerging, growing economies.
    Australia and New Zealand dumped the dollar last year.
    There are others that I cannot recall, but I have been following this story since Hugo Chavez launched the Sucre in early 2010.
    Less than half the world uses the dollar, and this has put the brakes on the endless printing party the FED has enjoyed for the past 15 years. The US is now sitting on piles of paper money nobody wants.
    If the Euro moves with the East, the US dollar will completely collapse. Right now, I don’t see that happening, but it is a danger.
    Libya and Iraq tried to get the US removed as the world reserve currency and move the reserve back to gold. We know what happened to both nations. Hugo Chavez was far more crafty, and the advent of the first electronic currency was the death toll of the whole idea of a world reserve currency………
    The public disgust with the US has just gotten much louder. Perhaps it will wake up a few Americans, but don’t hold your breath.

    Reply
  2. “But it made mistake in demonizing both countries”. Indeed. What were they thinking? “President Barack Obama spoke to Chinese President Xi Jinping late Sunday in a bid to get Beijing off the fence.”
    http://bigstory.ap.org/article/us-obama-china-agree-ukraine-sovereignty
    I get the impression that Obama thought he could bully China to turn against Russia. Due to their arrogance the people who run the U.S. foreign policy are entirely divorced from reality.

    Reply

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