Greece’s Lesson For Russia — Paul Craig Roberts
Greece’s Lesson For Russia
Paul Craig Roberts
“Greece’s debt can now
only be made sustainable through debt relief measures that go far beyond what
Europe has been willing to consider so far.” — International Monetary Fund
Greece’s lesson for Russia, and for
China and Iran, is to avoid all financial relationships with the West. The West
simply cannot be trusted. Washington is committed to economic and political
hegemony over every other country and uses the Western financial system for
asset freezes, confiscations, and sanctions. Countries that have independent
foreign policies and also have assets in the West cannot expect Washington to
respect their property rights or their ownership. Washington freezes or steals
countries’ assets, or in the case of France imposes multi-billion dollar fines,
in order to force compliance with Washington’s policies. Iran, for example,
lost the use of $100 billion, approximately one-fourth of the Iranian GDP, for
years simply because Iran insisted on its rights under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty.
Russian journalists are asking me if
Obama’s willingness to reach a deal with Iran means there is hope a deal can be
reached over Ukraine. The answer is No. Moreover, as I will later explain, the
deal with Iran doesn’t mean much as far as Washington is concerned.
Three days ago (July 14) a high
ranking military officer, Gen. Paul Selva, the third in about as many days,
told the US Senate that Russia is “an existential threat to this nation (the
US).” Only a few days prior the Senate had heard the same thing from US Marine
commander Joseph Dunford and from the Secretary of the Air Force. A few days
before that, the Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff warned of a Russian
“hybrid threat.”
Washington is invested heavily in using Ukraine
against Russia. All the conflict there originates with Washington’s puppet
government in Kiev. Russia is blamed for everything, including the destruction
of the Malaysian airliner. Washington has used false charges to coerce the EU
into sanctions against Russia that are not in the EU’s interest. As Washington
has succeeded in coercing all of Europe to harm Europe’s political and economic
relationships with Russia and to enter into a state of conflict with Russia,
certainly Washington is not going to agree to an Ukrainian settlement. Even if
Washington wanted to do so, as Washington’s entire position rests on nothing
but propaganda, Washington would have to disavow itself in order to come to an
agreement.
Despite everything, Russia’s president and foreign
minister continue to speak of the US and Washington’s EU vassal states as “our
partners.” Perhaps Putin and Lavrov are being sarcastic. The most certain thing
of our time is that Washington and its vassals are not partners of Russia.
The Wolfowitz doctrine, the basis of US foreign and
military policy, declares that the rise of Russia or any other country cannot be permitted, because the
US is the Uni-power and cannot tolerate any constraint on its unilateral
actions.
As long as this doctrine reigns in Washington, neither
Russia, China, nor Iran, the nuclear agreement not withstanding, are safe. As
long as Iran has an independent foreign policy, the nuclear agreement does not
protect Iran, because any significant policy conflict with Washington can
produce new justifications for sanctions.
With the nuclear agreement with Iran comes the release
of Iran’s $100 billion in frozen Western balances. I heard yesterday a member
of the Council for Foreign Relations say that Iran should invest its released
$100 billion in US and Europe companies. If Iran does this, the Iranian
government is setting itself up for further blackmail. Investing anywhere in
the West means that Iran’s assets can be frozen or confiscated at any time.
if Obama were to dismiss Victoria Nuland, Susan Rice,
and Samantha Power and replace these neoconservatives with sane diplomats, the
outlook would improve. Then Russia, China, and Iran would have a better
possibility of reaching accommodation with the US on terms other than
vassalage.
Russia and China, having emerged from a poorly
functioning communist economic system, naturally regard the West as a model. It
seems China has fallen for Western capitalism head over heels. Russia perhaps
less so, but the economists in these two countries are the same as the West’s
neoliberal economists, which means that they are unwitting servants of Western
financial imperialism. Thinking mistakenly that they are being true to
economics, they are being true to Washington’s hegemony.
With the deregulation that began in the Clinton
regime, Western capitalism has become socially dysfunctional. In the US and
throughout the West capitalism no longer serves the people. Capitalism serves
the owners and managers of capital and no one else.
This is why US income inequality is now as bad or
worse than during the “robber baron” era of the 1920s. The 1930s regulation
that made capitalism a functioning economic system has been repealed. Today in
the Western world capitalism is a looting mechanism. Capitalism not only loots
labor, capitalism loots entire countries, such as Greece which is being forced
by the EU to sell of Greece’s national assets to foreign purchasers.
Before Putin and Lavrov again refer to their “American
partners,” they should reflect on the EU’s lack of good will toward Greece.
When a member of the EU itself is being looted and driven into the ground by
its compatriots, how can Russia, China, and Iran expect better treatment? If
the West has no good will toward Greece, where is the West’s good will toward
Russia?
The Greek government was forced to capitulate to the
EU, despite the support it received from the referendum, because the Greeks
relied on the good will of their European partners and underestimated the
mendacity of the One Percent. The Greek government did not expect the merciless
attitude of its fellow EU member governments. The Greek government actually
thought that its expert analysis of the Greek debt situation and economy would
carry weight in the negotiations. This expectation left the Greek government
without a backup plan. The Greek government gave no thought to how to go about
leaving the euro and putting in place a monetary and banking system independent
of the euro. The lack of preparation for exit left the government with no
alternative to the EU’s demands.
The termination of Greece’s fiscal sovereignty is what
is in store for Italy, Spain, and Portugal, and eventually for France and
Germany. As Jean-Claude Trichet, the former head of the European Central Bank
said, the sovereign debt crisis signaled that it is time to bring Europe beyond
a “strict concept of nationhood.” The next step in the centralization of Europe
is political centralization. The Greek debt crisis is being used to establish
the principle that being a member of the EU means that the country has lost its
sovereignty.
The notion, prevalent in the Western financial media,
that a solution has been imposed on the Greeks is nonsense. Nothing has been
solved. The conditions to which the Greek government submitted make the debt
even less payable. In a short time the issue will again be before us. As John
Maynard Keynes made clear in 1936 and as every economist knows, driving down
consumer incomes by cutting pensions, employment, wages, and social services,
reduces consumer and investment demand, and thereby GDP, and results in large
budget deficits that have to be covered by borrowing. Selling pubic assets to
foreigners transfers the revenue flows out of the Greek economy into foreign
hands.
Unregulated naked capitalism, has proven in the 21st
century to be unable to produce economic growth anywhere in the West.
Consequently, median family incomes are declining. Governments cover up the
decline by underestimating inflation and by not counting as unemployed discouraged
workers who, unable to find jobs, have ceased looking. By not counting
discouraged workers the US is able to report a 5.2 percent rate of
unemployment. Including discouraged workers brings the unemployment rate to
23.1 percent. A 23 percent rate of unemployment has nothing in common with
economic recovery.
Even the language used in the West is deceptive. The
Greek “bailout” does not bail out Greece. The bailout bails out the holders of
Greek debt. Many of these holders are not Greece’s original creditors. What the
“bailout” does is to make the New York hedge funds’ bet on the Greek debt pay
off for the hedge funds. The bailout money goes not to Greece but to those who
speculated on the debt being paid. According to news reports, Quantitative Easing
by the ECB has been used to purchase Greek debt from the troubled banks that
made the loans, so the debt issue is no longer a creditor issue.
China seems unaware of the risk of investing in the
US. China’s new rich are buying up residential communities in California,
forgetting the experience of Japanese-Americans who were herded into detention
camps during Washington’s war with Japan. Chinese companies are buying US
companies and ore deposits in the US. These acquisitions make China susceptible
to blackmail over foreign policy differences.
The “globalism” that is hyped in the West is
inconsistent with Washington’s unilateralism. No country with assets inside the
Western system can afford to have policy differences with Washington. The
French bank paid the $9 billion fine for disobeying Washington’s dictate of its
lending practices, because the alternative was the close down of its operations
in the United States. The French government was unable to protect the French
bank from being looted by Washington.
It is testimony to the insouciance of our time that
the stark inconsistency of globalism with American unilateralism has passed
unnoticed.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic
Policy and associate editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist for
Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had
many university appointments. His internet columns have attracted a worldwide
following. Roberts' latest books areThe Failure of
Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West and How America Was Lost
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