How the US colonizes sovereign economies to financing its military to bully countries and nations into colonizing them.
US Military Uses IMF & World Bank To Launder 85% Of Its Black Budget
14
August, 2015
Though
transparency was a cause he championed when campaigning for the
presidency, President
Obama has largely avoided making certain defense costs known to the
public. However,
when it comes to military appropriations for government spy agencies,
we know from Freedom of Information Act requests that the
so-called “black budget” is an increasingly massive expenditure
subsidized by American taxpayers. The
CIA and and NSA alone garnered $52.6
billion in
funding in 2013 while the Department of Defense black ops budget for
secret military projects exceeds this number. It is estimated to be
$58.7 billion for the fiscal year 2015.
What
is the black budget? Officially,
it is the military’s appropriations for “spy
satellites,
stealth bombers, next-missile-spotting radars, next-gen drones, and
ultra-powerful eavesdropping gear.”
However, of
greater interest to some may be the clandestine nature and full scope
of the black budget, which, according to analyst Catherine Austin
Fitts, goes far beyond classified appropriations. Based
on her research, some of which can be found in her piece “What’s
Up With the Black Budget?,”
Fitts concludes that the during the last decade, global financial
elites have configured an elaborate system that makes most of the
military budget unauditable.This
is because the real black budget includes money acquired by
intelligence groups via narcotics trafficking, predatory lending, and
various kinds of other financial fraud.
The
result of this vast, geopolitically-sanctioned money laundering
scheme is that Housing
and Urban Devopment and other agencies are
used for drug trafficking and securities fraud. According
to Fitts,
the scheme allows for at least 85 percent of the U.S. federal budget
to remain unaudited.
Fitts
has been researching this issue since 2001, when she began to believe
that a financial coup d’etat was underway. Specifically,
she suspected that the banks, corporations, and investors acting in
each global region were part of a “global
heist,”
whereby capital was being sucked out of each country. She was right.
As
Fitts asserts,
“[She] served as Assistant Secretary of Housing at the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in the United States where I oversaw billions of government investment in US communities…..I later found out that the government contractor leading the War on Drugs strategy for U.S. aid to Peru, Colombia and Bolivia was the same contractor in charge of knowledge management for HUD enforcement. This Washington-Wall Street game was a global game. The peasant women of Latin America were up against the same financial pirates and business model as the people in South Central Los Angeles, West Philadelphia, Baltimore and the South Bronx.”
This
is part of an even larger financial scheme. It
is fairly well-established by now that international financial
institutions like the World Trade Organization, the World Bank, and
the International Monetary Fund operate primarily as instruments of
corporate power and nation-controlling infrastructure investment
mechanisms. For example, the primary purpose of the World Bank is to
bully developing countries into borrowing money for infrastructure
investments that will fleece trillions of dollars while permanently
indebting these “debtor” nations to West. But how exactly does
the World Bank go about doing this?
John
Perkins wrote about this paradigm in his book, Confessions
of an Economic Hitman.
During the 1970s, Perkins worked for the international engineering
consulting firm, Chas T. Main, as an “economic hitman.” He
says the
operations of the World Bank are nothing less than “pure
economic colonization on behalf of powerful corporations and banks
that use the United States government as their tool.”
In
his book, Perkins discusses Joseph Stiglitz, the Chief Economist for
the World Bank from 1997-2000, at length.Stiglitz
described the four-step
plan for
bamboozling developing countries into becoming debtor nations:
Step One, according to Stiglitz, is to convince a nation to privatize its state industries.
Step Two utilizes “capital market liberalization,” which refers to the sudden influx of speculative investment money that depletes national reserves and property values while triggering a large interest bump by the IMF.
Step Three, Stiglitz says, is “Market-Based Pricing,” which means raising the prices on food, water and cooking gas. This leads to “Step Three and a Half: The IMF Riot.” Examples of this can be seen in Indonesia, Bolivia, Ecuador and many other countries where the IMF’s actions have caused financial turmoil and social strife.
Step Four, of course, is “free trade,” where all barriers to the exploitation of local produce are eliminated.
There
is a connection between the U.S. black budget and the trillion dollar
international investment fraud scheme. Our
government and the banking cartels and corporatocracy running it have
configured a complex screen to block our ability to audit their
budget and the funds they use for various black op projects.
However,
they can not block our ability to uncover their actions and raise
awareness.
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