Putin
Advisor Proposes "Anti-Dollar Alliance" To Halt US
Aggression Abroad
18
June, 2014,
It
has been a while since both Ukraine, and the ongoing Russian response
to western sanctions (which set off the great Eurasian axis in
motion, pushing China and Russia close together, and accelerating the
"Holy Grail" gas deal between the two countries) have made
headlines. It is still not clear just why the western media dropped
Ukraine coverage like a hot potato, especially since the civil war in
Ukraine's Donbas continues to rage and claim dozens of casualties on
both sides. Perhaps the audience has simply gotten tired of hearing
about mixed chess/checkers game between Putin vs Obama, and instead
has reverted to reading the propaganda surrounding just as deadly
events in the third war of Iraq in as many decades.
However,
"out of sight" may be just what Russia's political elite
wants. In fact, as VoR's Valentin Mândr??escu reports, while
the great US spin and distraction machine is focused elsewhere,
Russia is already preparing for the next steps. Which brings us to
Putin advisor Sergey Glazyev, the same person who in early March was
the first to suggest Russia dump US bonds and abandon the dollar in
retaliation to US sanctions, a strategy which worked because even as
the Kremlin has retained control over Crimea, western sanctions have
magically halted (and not only that, but as the Russian central bank
just reported, the country's 2014 current account surplus may be as
high as $35 billion, up from $33 billion in 2013, and a far cry from
some fabricated "$200+ billion" in Russian capital outflows
which Mario Draghi was warning about recently). Glazyev was also the
person instrumental in pushing the Kremlin to approach China and
force the nat gas deal with Beijing which took place not necessarily
at the most beneficial terms for Russia.
It
is this same Glazyev who published an article in Russian Argumenty
Nedeli,
in
which he outlined a plan for "undermining the economic strength
of the US" in order to force Washington to stop the civil war in
Ukraine. Glazyev
believes that the only way of making the US give up its plans on
starting a new cold war is to crash the dollar system.
As
summarized
by VoR,
in his article, published by Argumenty Nedeli, Putin's economic aide
and the mastermind behind the Eurasian Economic Union, argues that
Washington
is trying to provoke a Russian military intervention in Ukraine,
using the junta in Kiev as bait.
If fulfilled, the plan will give Washington a number of important
benefits. Firstly, it will allow the US to introduce new sanctions
against Russia, writing
off Moscow's portfolio of US Treasury bills.
More important is that a new wave of sanctions will create a
situation in which Russian companies won't be able to service their
debts to European banks.
According
to Glazyev, the so-called "third phase" of sanctions
against Russia will be a tremendous cost for the European Union. The
total estimated losses will be higher than 1 trillion euros. Such
losses will severely hurt the European economy, making the US the
sole "safe haven" in the world. Harsh
sanctions against Russia will also displace Gazprom from the European
energy market, leaving it wide
open for the much more expensive LNG from the US.
Co-opting
European countries in a new arms race and military operations against
Russia will increase American political influence in Europe and will
help the US force the European Union to accept the American version
of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, a trade
agreement that will basically transform the EU into a big economic
colony of the US. Glazyev believes that igniting a new war in Europe
will only bring benefits for America and only problems for the
European Union. Washington has repeatedly used global and regional
wars for the benefit of the American economy and now the White
House is trying to use the civil war in Ukraine as a pretext to
repeat the old trick.
Glazyev's
set of countermeasures specifically targets the core strength of the
US war machine, i.e. the Fed's printing press. Putin's
advisor proposes the creation of a "broad anti-dollar alliance"
of countries willing and able to drop the dollar from their
international trade.
Members of the alliance would also refrain from keeping the currency
reserves in dollar-denominated instruments. Glazyev advocates
treating positions in dollar-denominated instruments like holdings of
junk securities and believes that regulators should require full
collateralization of such holdings.
An anti-dollar coalition would be the first step for the creation of
an anti-war coalition that can help stop the US' aggression.
Unsurprisingly,
Sergey Glazyev believes that
the main role in the creation of such a political coalition is to be
played by the European business community because America's attempts
to ignite a war in Europe and a cold war against Russia are
threatening the interests of big European business.
Judging by the recent efforts to stop the sanctions against Russia,
made by the German, French, Italian and Austrian business leaders,
Putin's aide is right in his assessment. Somewhat surprisingly for
Washington, the war for Ukraine may soon become the war for Europe's
independence from the US and a war against the dollar.
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