Washington’s
Global Economic Wars
James
Petras
Introduction
During most of the past two decades Washington has
aggressively launched military and economic wars against at
least nine countries, either directly or through its
military aid to regional allies and proxies. US air and
ground troops have bombed or invaded Afghanistan, Iraq,
Pakistan, Libya, Somalia, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon.
More recently Washington has escalated its global economic
war against major economic rivals as well as against
weaker countries. The US no longer confines its aggressive
impulses to peripheral economic countries in the Middle
East, Latin America and Southern Asia: It has declared
trade wars against world powers in Asia, Eastern and Central
Europe and the Gulf states.
The targets of the US economic aggression include economic
powerhouses like Russia, China, Germany, Iran and Saudi
Arabia, as well as Syria, Yemen, Venezuela, Cuba and the
Donbas region of Ukraine.
There is an increasingly thinner distinction between
military and economic warfare, as the US has frequently
moved from one to the other, particularly when economic
aggression has not resulted in ‘regime change’ – as in the
case of the sanctions campaign against Iraq leading up to
the devastating invasion and destruction.
In this essay, we propose to examine the strategies and
tactics underlying Washington’s economic warfare, their
successes and failures, and the political and economic
consequences to target nations and to world stability.
Washington’s
Economic Warfare and Global Power
The US has used different tactical weapons as it pursues its
economic campaigns against targeted adversaries and even
against its long-time allies.
Two supposed allies, Germany and Saudi Arabia, have been
attacked by the Obama Administration and US Congress via
‘legal’ manipulations aimed at their financial systems and
overseas holdings. This level of aggression against
sovereign powers is remarkable and reckless. In 2016 the US
Justice Department slapped a $14 billion dollar penalty on
Germany’s leading international bank, Deutsche Bank,
throwing the German stock market into chaos, driving the
bank’s shares down 40% and destabilizing Germany’s
financial system. This unprecedented attack on an ally’s
major bank was in direct retaliation for Germany’s support
of the European Commission’s $13 billion tax levy against
the US-tax evading Apple Corporation for its notorious
financial shenanigans in Ireland. German political and
business leaders immediately dismissed Washington’s
legalistic rhetoric for what it was: the Obama
Administration’s retaliation in order to protect America’s
tax evading and money laundering multinationals.
The chairman of the German parliament’s economic committee
stated that the gross US attempt to extort Deutsche Bank
had all the elements of an economic war. He noted that
Washington had a “long tradition of using every available
opportunity to wage what amounted to a trade war if it
benefits their own economy” and the “extortionate
damages claim” against Deutsche Bank were a punitive
example. US economic sanctions against some of Germany’s
major trade partners, like Russia, China and Iran,
constitute another tactic to undermine Germany’s huge export
economy. Ironically, Germany is still considered “a
valued ally” when it comes to the US wars against
Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, which have driven millions of
refugees to Europe creating havoc with Germany’s political,
economic and social system and threatening to overthrow the
government of ‘ally’ Angela Merkel.
The US Congress launched an economic-judicial war against
its closest ally in the Gulf region when it approved
legislation granting US victims of Islamist terrorism,
especially related to the attacks on September 11, 2001,the
right to sue the government of Saudi Arabia and seize its
overseas assets. This included the Kingdom’s immense
‘sovereign funds’ and constitutes an arbitrary and blatant
violation of Saudi sovereignty. This opens the Pandora’s
Box of economic warfare by allowing victims to sue any
government for sponsoring terrorism, including the United
States! Saudi leaders immediately reacted by threatening
to withdraw billions of dollars of assets in US Treasuries
and investments.
The US economic sanctions against Russia are designed to
strengthen its stranglehold on the economies of Europe which
rely on trade with Russia. These have especially weakened
German and Polish trade relations with Russia, a major
market for German industrial exports and Polish agriculture
products. Originally, the US-imposed economic sanctions
against Moscow were supposed to harm Russian consumers,
provoke political unrest and lead to ‘regime change’. In
reality, the unrest it provoked has been mainly among
European exporters, whose contracts with Russia were
shredded and billions of Euros were lost. Furthermore, the
political and diplomatic climate between Europe and Russia
has deteriorated while Washington has ‘pivoted’ toward a
more militaristic approach.
Results in Asia have been even more questionable:
Washington’s economic campaign against China has moved
awkwardly in two directions: Prejudicial trade deals with
Asian-Pacific countries and a growing US military
encirclement of China’s maritime trade routes.
The Obama regime dispatched Treasury Secretary Jack Lew to
promote the Trans- Pacific Partnership (TPP) among a dozen
regional governments, which would blatantly exclude China,
Asia’s largest economic power. In a slap to the outgoing
Obama Administration, the US Congress rejected his showpiece
economic weapon against China, the TPP.
Meanwhile,
Obama ‘encouraged’ his erstwhile ‘allies’ in the Philippines
and Vietnam to sue China for maritime violations over the
disputed ‘Spratly Islands’ before the Permanent Court of
Arbitration. Japan and Australia signed military pacts and
base agreements with the Pentagon aimed at disrupting
China’s trade routes. Obama’s so-called ‘Pivot to Asia’
is a transparent campaign to block China from its markets
and trading partners in Southeast Asia and Pacific countries
of Latin American. Washington’s flagrant economic warfare
resulted in slapping harsh import tariffs on Chinese
industrial exports, especially steel and tires. The US also
sent a ‘beefed up’ air and sea armada for ‘joint exercises’
along China’s regional trade routes and its access to
critical Persian Gulf oil, setting off a ‘war of tension’.
In response to Washington’s ham-fisted aggression, the
Chinese government deftly rolled out the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) with over fifty
countries eagerly signing on for lucrative trade and
investment deals with Beijing. The AIIB’s startling success
does not bode well for Obama’s ‘Pivot to Pacific Hegemony’.
The so-called US-EU-Iran accord did not end Washington’s
trade war against Teheran. Despite Iran’s agreement to
dismantle its peaceful uranium enrichment and nuclear
research programs, Washington has blocked investors and
tried to undermine trade relations, while still holding
billions of dollars of Iranian state assets, frozen since
the overthrow of the Shah in 1979.
Nevertheless, a German trade mission signed on a three
billion trade agreement with Iran in early October 2016 and
called on the US to fulfill its side of the agreement with
Teheran – so far to no avail.
The US stands alone in sending its nuclear naval armada to
the Persian Gulf and threatens commercial relations. Even
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the longstanding enemy of the
Iranian Islamic Republic, has agreed to a cooperative oil
production arrangement at a recent OPEC meeting.
Washington’s declaration of economic warfare against two of
its most strategic powerful allies, Germany and Saudi Arabia
and three rising competitor world powers, has eroded US
economic competitiveness, undermined its access to lucrative
markets and increased its reliance on aggressive military
strategies over diplomacy.
What is striking and perplexing about Washington’s style of
economic warfare is how costly this has been for the US
economy and for US allies, with so little concrete benefit.
US oil companies have lost billions in joint exploitation
deals with Russia because of Obama’s sanctions. US bankers,
agro-exporters, high-tech companies are missing out on
lucrative sales just to ‘punish’ Russia over the incredibly
corrupt and bankrupt US coup regime in Ukraine.
US multi-national corporations, especially those involved in
Pacific Coast transport and shipyards, Silicon Valley high
tech industry and Washington State’s agro-export producers
are threatened by the US trade agreements that exclude
China.
Iran’s billion dollar market is looking for everything from
commercial airplanes to mining machinery. Huge trade deals
have has been lost to US companies because Obama continues
to impose de facto sanctions. Meanwhile, European and Asian
competitors are signing contracts.
Despite Washington’s dependence on German technical knowhow
and Saudi petro-dollar investments as key to its global
ambitions, Obama’s irrational policies continue to undermine
US trade.
Washington has engaged in economic warfare against ‘lesser
economic powers’ that nevertheless play significant
political roles in their regions. The US retains the
economic boycott of Cuba; it wages economic aggression
against Venezuela and imposes economic sanctions against
Syria, Yemen and the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine.
While these countries are not costly in terms of economic
loss to US business interests, they exercise significant
political and ideological influence in their regions, which
undermine US ambitions.
Conclusion
Washington’s resort to economic warfare complements its
military fueled empire building.
But economic and military warfare are losing propositions.
While the US may extract a few billion dollars from Deutsch
Bank, it will have lost much more in long-term, large-scale
relations with German industrialists, politicians and
financiers. This is critical because Germany plays the key
role in shaping economic policy in the European Union. The
practice of US multi-national corporations seeking off-shore
tax havens in the EU may come to a grinding halt when the
European Commission finishes its current investigations.
The Germans may not be too sympathetic to their American
competitors.
Obama’s
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) has not only collapse, it
has compelled China to open new avenues for trade and
cooperation with Asian-Pacific nations – exactly the
opposite of its original goal of isolating Beijing. China’s
Asia Infrastructure and Investment Bank (AIIB) has attracted
4 time more participants than Washington’s TPP and massive
infrastructure projects are being financed to further bind
ASEAN countries to China. China’s economic growth at 6.7%
more than three times that of the US at 2%. Worse, for the
Obama Administration, Washington has alienated its
historically most reliable allies, as China, deepens
economic ties and cooperation agreements with Thailand,
Philippines, Pakistan, Cambodia and Laos.
Iran, despite US sanctions, is gaining markets and trade
with Germany, Russia, China and the EU.
The Saudi-US conflict has yet to play-out but any escalation
of law suits against the kingdom will result in the flight
of hundreds of billions of investment dollars from the US.
In effect, Obama’s campaign of economic warfare may lead to
the infinitely more costly military warfare and the massive
loss of jobs and profits for the US economy. Washington is
increasingly isolated. The only allies supporting its
campaign of economic sanctions are second and third rate
powers, like Poland and current corrupt parasites in
Ukraine. As long as the Poles and Ukrainians can ‘mooch’
off of the IMF and grab EU and US ‘loans’, they will
cheerlead Obama’s charge against Russia. Israel, as long as
it can gobble up an additional $38 billion dollars in ‘aid’
from Washington, remains the biggest advocate for war
against Iran.
Washington spends billions of US tax-payer dollars on its
military bases in Japan, Philippines and Australia to
maintain its hegemony in the Asia-Pacific region. Its
allies, though, are salivating at the prospect for greater
trade and infrastructure investment deals with China.
Economic warfare doesn’t work for the Washington because the
US economy cannot compete, especially when it attacks its
own allies and traditional partners. Its regional allies
are keen to join the ‘forbidden’ markets and share in major
investment projects funded by China. Asian leaders
increasingly view Washington, with its ‘pivot to militarism’
as politically unreliable, unstable and dangerous. After
the Philippine government economic mission to China, expect
more to ‘jump ship’.
Economic warfare against declared adversaries can only
succeed if the US is committed to free trade with its
allies, ends punitive sanctions and stops pushing for
exclusive trade treaties that undermine its allies’
economies. Furthermore, Washington should stop catering to
the whims of special domestic interests. Absent these
changes, its losing campaign of economic warfare can only
turn into military warfare – a prospect devastating to the
US economy and to world peace.
No comments:
Post a Comment