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Showing posts with label deep trouble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deep trouble. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Can Global South put the Hague on its track.

Related video

Courtesy: kernowdamo

A meeting of a Global South movement, at ministerial level no less aims to not just censure Israel, but take direct action against them.

Right, so for decades, international condemnation of Israel's treatment of Palestinians has echoed through the corridors of the United Nations, international tribunals, and human rights organisations, it has been going on for far longer than just as far back as October of 2023, as we should all know by now. Yet, those condemnations rarely translated into consequences. Instead, international law appeared to exist in two parallel worlds doesn’t it? One in which Palestinian suffering is documented and acknowledged, and another in which Israel is completely immune from meaningful sanction. That may be about to change.


Next week, the Hague Group—a coalition of Global South nations formed to uphold international law in the Israel-Palestine context—will convene an emergency ministerial summit in Bogotá, Colombia. 

The summit represents not just another diplomatic gathering, but the possible beginning of an international legal and geopolitical shift, a meaningful shift with actual action against Israel, hence the emergency bit. Co-chaired by Colombia and South Africa, the Hague Group's intent is not simply to issue statements, but to utilise the very legal tools for too long rendered impotent by the political impunity Israel has enjoyed and that the Bogotá meeting, especially in light of many other non member states – Israel critical states - also attending, constituting a turning point in efforts to hold Israel accountable, marking a transition from symbolic protest to enforceable, meaningful international action.

The discussion emphasizes how *international relations* have long condemned Israel's actions against Palestinians, yet these seldom result in tangible changes. This highlights a disparity between acknowledging Palestinian suffering and enforcing *foreign policy**. The lack of consequences raises questions about global **geopolitics* and the effectiveness of current **international law**.

Monday, March 13, 2023

Banks burst in US!!

Top U.S. & World Headlines — March 13, 2023

_____________________________

Silicon Valley Bank CEO delivers message to employees

Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) Bust Rattles INDIAN Firms - Reports

The US Govt’s closure of the largest tech start-up funding bank has left Indian investors and software firms concerned over their deposits, with an estimated 21 Indian start-ups involved with the bank. (Tracxn)

Some are awaiting a bailout, while others some have already started moving their funds out, amid fears of a potential withdrawal limit. 

SVB had a reported $209bn in total assets & $175.4bn in total deposits, as of December 2022.  U.S. cryptocurrency firm Circle announced Friday it has $3.3bn of its $40bn of USD Coin reserves at SVB.

Bubble burst? @RT_India_official

MORE HERE : Record Bank Run Drained A Quarter, Or $42BN, Of SVB's Deposits In Hours, Leaving It With Negative $1BN In Cash

_________________________________

Silicon Valley Bank's demise was closely followed by that of New York-based Signature Bank.

__________________________________

3, 2, 1, and... BOOM.

Trading just halted for multiple U.S. bank stocks at open.

W Alliance Bancorp down 75%

First Rep. Bank down 66%

Customers Bancorp down 54%

PacWest down 46%

Zions Bancorp down 44%

Bank Hawaii down 42%

Comerica down 39%

EW Bancorp down 32%

Courtesy @21st Century Wire 


______________________________________________________________

Friday, January 6, 2023

Throwback: 1979 Iranians students occupation of US Embassy;


 US Embassy in Tehran was the CIA's HQ for operations in Asia. USD 20 printing was done there! The students collated the shredded confidential documents and were sent to many countries!

 

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Ukrainian bankruptcy looming

 🗣 Russian Duma speaker Volodin stated that 2014 coup d’etat in Ukraine have resulted in complete loss of sovereignty of the country. Before 2022 its budget deficit was almost 40% covered by foreign loans and credits. Next year deficit will amount 58%

“Kiev is spending over a half of its income on loan payments and is forced to take new credits. Kiev tries to conceal it, but the problem is obvious. Zelensky has stolen future of Ukrainian people selling the country to debt slavery”

☝️ In 1990 Ukrainian GDP was $90.3 billion exceeding GDP of countries like Hungary, Poland and Bulgaria. Russia took all USSR’s debt and Ukraine became an independent state, a country without debts. Ukraine inherited about one third of all Soviet space industry, aviation industry, ship building industry and had really huge industrial capacity at the onset of its existence. 

➖ There was a good reason why Yanukovich’s government refused to sign the EU association agreement. According to Prime Minister Azarov, Ukraine would need about 160-170 billion euros in ten years only to adapt technical regulations for EU standards as a part of the association agreement. That was about three yearly budgets of Ukraine and almost ten times its national debt by the period. 

❗️In June 2022 Ukraine’s debt reached historic record of $94 billion. Considering continued fall of hryvna and chronic budget deficit of Ukraine amplified by military expenses, Ukraine is unable to sustain its own economy without resorting to foreign financial aid, which also often takes the form of debt. 

➖European countries and the U.S. are no longer willing to give “free” financial and military aid to Ukraine. What does it mean? It means inevitable default and bankruptcy of Ukraine. Nobody will give them anything for free. While Ukraine is already doomed, this does not apply to its regions. Crimea, Donbass, Kherson and Zaporozhye are not going to pay debts made by Zelensky’s regime and its predecessors. 

🤔 Maybe it’s time for other Russian-speaking regions of Ukraine to think about money?


courtesy : telegram WAR  CRIMES IN UKRAINE

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Nurses across UK vote to go on strike over pay dispute first time in 106 years


🔹The British Nurses Union, representing hundreds of thousands of nurses in the United Kingdom, has voted to hold the first nationwide strike in the union's 106-year history to demand fair pay and safe staffing.

>>>>>>>

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said the action will affect most National Health Service (NHS) employers. The primary grievance of the nurses are pay levels and patient safety concerns.

The union said all NHS employers in Northern Ireland and Scotland will be included in the strike, and all employers in Wales have also reached the threshold to join.

RCN general secretary and chief executive Pat Cullen also said anger was turning into action and all staff believed enough was enough. He said the voice of nurses in the UK is loud and will definitely be heard because nurses can no longer tolerate the financial knife edge at home and the raw deal at work.

Cullen said now is the time for ministers to look in the mirror and ask themselves how long they will leave nursing staff in this situation.

“While we plan our strike action, next week's budget is the UK government's opportunity to signal a new direction with serious investment. Across the country, politicians have the power to stop this now and at any point.”

“This action will be as much for patients as it is for nurses.”

“Standards are falling too low and we have strong public backing for our campaign to raise them. This winter, we are asking the public to show nursing staff you are with us.”

The union, with more than 300,000 members, had asked its members for a pay rise of 5% above RPI inflation, which is currently more than 12%.

The RCN said surveys showed the salary of an experienced nurse had fallen by 20% in real terms since 2010, and that nurses were working as little as one day a week without pay.

Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said while thanking the efforts and sacrifices of NHS staff, including nurses, “we are very sorry that some union members have voted for industrial action.”

“These are challenging times, which is why we accepted the recommendations of the independent NHS Pay Review Body in full and have given over one million NHS workers a pay rise of at least £1,400 this year.”

He said the priority was to keep patients safe during any strike and predicted that strikes across the NHS were likely this winter.

The British Medical Association, which represents doctors, and Emma Runswick, vice president, said in this regard that they want the government to listen to the concerns of health workers and to make the investments the NHS and its workforce desperately need.

Meanwhile, health workers in other unions, including ambulance staff, hospital porters and cleaners are also voting on industrial action over pay.

courtesy PressTV | 
Wednesday, 09 November 2022 6:35 PM



Friday, November 4, 2022

UN, votes to end blockade of Cuba



>>>>>>>>> Today at the UN, 185 countries voted to demand an end to the criminal, 62-year U.S. blockade on Cuba. That’s 95% of the world.

Guess which lone two states voted against it, again? The United States and Israel, of course. The very same entities currently starving Yemen and Gaza. courtesy :
sarah
The UN General Assembly adopts a resolution calling on the US to lift the blockade of Cuba for the 30th time Voting has been held almost annually since 1992 

 185 countries voted in support of the resolution,

Israel and the US opposed it,  Brazil and Ukraine abstaineD.

COURTESY :  AZgeopolitics 


Thursday, November 3, 2022

Imran Khan survives assassination attempt

 

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has survived an assassination attempt during a political rally. He was shot in the leg but now he is in stable condition. @PressTV

Wednesday, November 2, 2022

Today marks the 105th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration




2nd Nov 2022 ~

The Balfour Declaration was issued by Britain laying the foundations for settler-colonialism in Palestine. 

The Balfour Declaration was named after British politician  Arthur James Balfour a white supremacist who is today revered by Britain.

As prime minister, Balfour passed the Aliens Act in 1905, an explicitly anti-immigration legislation which was designed to block entry to Britain for Jewish refugees fleeing from pogroms. Zionism, according to Balfour, was  a “serious effort to mitigate the age-old miseries created for western civilization by the presence in its midst of a body which is too long regarded as alien and even hostile, but which it was equally unable to expel or absorb.”

Known as "Bloody Balfour" for his brutal rule in Ireland until 1891, which he once said: "All the civilization in Ireland is the work of England”.  There's a drawing called  “Ireland wrestles with famine while Balfour plays golf”, which encapsulates his reputation there.

 In 1906, Balfour argued against giving Black people in South Africa the vote: “Men are not born equal, the white and black races are not born with equal capacities: they are born with different capacities which education cannot and will not change.”

Balfour's 1917 declaration set the stage for full-blown land theft and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in the decades that followed, which is ongoing today. 105 years after the declaration was issued people across Palestine are continuing to  resist against settler-colonialism.

For more information with regard to the Balfour Declaration I recommend reading the book “The Balfour Declaration Empire, the Mandate and Resistance in Palestine”, by Bernard Regan"



Sunday, October 30, 2022

stealing bus stops timbers seats - to survive coming winter!




 A shocking crime occurred in Latvia.

Criminals ruined 15 benches at bus stops.

69 wooden slats were simply cut down for firewood (!), the locals are sure. 

Preliminary damage — 1157 euros.

Law enforcement officers have launched an investigation and search for a strategic energy reserve. 

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

‘They’re Deliberately Destroying Britain – Will the Zombies Ever Wake up?’

 


 Dr. Vernon Coleman  | OCTOBER 25, 2022 BY

Back in July I wrote that if the appalling Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister we would be lost forever. I wrote that I believed Britain would be sucked into the Great Reset at terrifying speed. And I said that Sunak was the deadliest and most dangerous of the motley crew contending for the leadership of the Tory Party and, therefore, the nation.

 Now Sunak is Prime Minister – though he received the support of only half of Conservative MPs, he was not the favoured candidate of the Conservative Party members, and he was not elected to the position by the British electorate. How the hell did that happen?

 Do you think I’m being paranoid to suspect that it was all fixed for the Goldman Sachs/WEF candidate to win? Sunak’s track record is appalling. He said he wouldn’t put up taxes. And then he put up taxes. He wasted £11 billion of taxpayers’ money by paying too much interest on the UK’s debt.

 He said he hadn’t broken any lockdown laws. But he was fined by the police for breaking lockdown laws. The police said that those breaking lockdown laws were risking a criminal record. Does that mean our new Prime Minister is a criminal?

 Politicians used to be lawyers because lawyers used to be the most ruthless liars in any society. Today, many politicians were bankers. Could that possibly be because bankers are more ruthless and bigger liars?

 Sunak stuck by Johnson through months of chaos and appalling behaviour. He only jumped ship when it became inevitable that Johnson would have to go. He resigned to save his own skin. Within hours Sunak was being promoted with a flashy video.

 Sunak, who was head boy at school, is a former employee of Goldman Sachs – ‘the vampire squid wrapped round the face of humanity’ and in my view the most corrupt, evil bank in world history. Check out its record. And then check out how many other public figures used to work there.

 Goldman Sachs alumni sometimes seem to control the world. Sunak had a green card while living in Downing Street – and the green card declared him a permanent resident of the United States.

 Sunak’s wife minimised paying UK taxes. The company to which Sunak is linked continued trading with Russia when other companies were forced to abandon their relationships. And as I revealed last July, Sunak’s father-in-law’s company Infosys has close links to Schwab’s World Economic Forum.Infosys is described as a global leader in next generation digital services – ‘enabling clients in 46 countries to navigate their digital transformation’.

 That’s social credit to you and me.

 We might as well have Klaus Schwab of the WEF as Prime Minister. At least then we wouldn’t have to put up with that ever-present and unconvincing dental display. We’ve got a Prime Minister who has the inane manufactured grin of the runner-up in a bad reality show.

 Sunak will run Britain deep into the Great Reset – taking our hopes and our humanity with him. 

  Only God can help us now  

More here :  >>>


Thursday, October 13, 2022

No more such thing? Israeli PM Under Fire for Two-State Speech


 RT 23 SAept 2022:

Prime Minister Yair Lapid’s planned speech to the UN General Assembly on Thursday, which includes references to a two-state system between Israel and Palestine as a potential future prospect, has been slammed by fellow Israeli politicians.

“There’s no place or reason to bring up the idea of a Palestinian state," Alternate Prime Minister Naftali Bennett wrote on Facebook. “There’s no place for another country between the Mediterranean and the Jordan river, and no need to work for Palestinian statehood. Empty words such as ‘two-states’ should be left in the 1990s, along with other things long passed,” he said. 

Among others Lapid’s critics notably included Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked, Bezalel Smotrich, head of the Religious Zionism party as well as the opposition Likud party.


Monday, October 10, 2022

CRUISE MISSILES hitting UKRAINE

UPDATE ON THE STAGGERING ARRAY of CRUISE MISSILES CURRENTLY VISITING UKRAINE INFRASTRUCTURE.

As of 3pm Malaysian time reported by Pepe Escobar 

47 - Nikolaev region

60 - in Kiev

15 - in Lviv

27 - in the Vinnitsa region

20 - in Kharkov

15 - in Odessa region

After terrorist attack on Nord Stream pipelines & crimea bidges 

"""""""""""

Ukraine is entering the Stone Age

According to Strana V, infrastructure problems have started in almost all of Ukraine - there is no electricity, water, and internet. 

Eastern Ukraine has been hit hardest by the operation of backup lines. The main lines were hit earlier. 

Western Ukraine also suffered critical infrastructure damage but continues to operate on backup lines from Poland.  

"Thermal power plants and main enterprises in many cities have been damaged and the Ukrainian air defense system is overloaded," a source told the channel.

A third wave of Russian strikes on AFU facilities is expected, he said.

@strana_vvv



Rumble channel 

Sunday, October 9, 2022

FRANCE : FUEL SHORTAGE UPDATE: ITS GETTING WORSE



👉🏻 Yesterday, we told you that 717 gas station across the country had completely ran out of fuel. Today, that figure rose to 1821, with an additionnai 919 gas station partially out of fuel. 

🗣 Despite the lack of improvement, the minister of the ecological transition explained yesterday that «The situation should continue to improve, since we have taken authorizations for tankers to circulate this weekend, and have released strategic stocks". He dismissed for the moment the prospect of restrictions at the pump: «we are not there, apart from bans on filling jerrycans, especially in northern France where we have the most tense situation»

🔗 You can follow the fuel shortage across France in real time trough the website penurie.monessence.fr (https://penurie.mon-essence.fr/w/)


Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Malaysian Petronas : A leak has been detected on the Sabah-Sarawak gas pipeline.









Malaysia remains the fifth largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) after Australia, Qatar, the US and Russia, according to the International Gas Union (IGU). Competition between Europe and Asia to get LNG will escalate, and prices will go up.

Japan will suffer the most from the disruption of supplies. Just a week ago, the country's authorities agreed with Petronas about additional LNG supplies in case of an emergency or disruptions in the supply of energy resources. And here is another "accident"!

As in the case of the Nord Streams the greatest damage will be inflicted on another "strategic" ally of the United States - Japan. 

The world economy is being systematically plunged into crisis. At the same time, only those who have their own energy resources are safe



 


In less than three weeks,3 gas pipelines have been damaged in the world at once. Which makes it very "weird"...

Interesting part is that 2 main US "strategic allies" are directly affected...

Petronas had triggered the force majeure legal clause following the leak on September 21 according to Bloomberg(2022 Nord Stream sabotages were took place 26–29 September 2022)

Malaysian Petronas has declared force majeure on LNG exports. A leak has been detected on the Sabah-Sarawak gas pipeline.

courtesy : AZgeopolitics 


Sunday, September 25, 2022

In 2021, Zelensky told his people in Donbass to leave. So they are.

 




Let's frame this up correctly; a nation-state is one where there is only one predominant ethnicity (i.e Japan). There are also nation-states that have two founding nations (ie Canada and Belgium). Most states are multiethnic states.

 It would not be an alien concept to have introduced constitutional variations (https://t.me/c/1795183969/561) to allow different peoples to live within the territorial integrity of one state (aka Minsk Agreements). Ukraine is not a nation-state due to its large Russian minority, and smaller Hungarian, Polish, Romanian minorities.

 How then do you "deoccupy" 4 million people living in Donbass? Would that not constitute ethnic cleansing? For anyone who had doubts as to Zelensky's plans for this region. And yet his views were not racially divisive before he took office - see here. (https://t.me/c/1795183969/1402)What happened?

If the second video is not working << try here >>

Saturday, July 16, 2022

Russia is winning the financial war

 Jun 23, 2022

·Alasdair Macleod

Sanctions have backfired on those described by Vladimir Putin as the unfriendly nations. It is setting in train a series of events likely to undermine the whole Western financial system, as prices rise driving interest rates higher, and economic activity shrinks. These developments alone are leading to contracting bank credit, crashing stock markets, and sharply higher bond yields.

Last week, I wrote about the impact on the banking system and the likely consequences. Russia, China, and associated nations who depend upon them for trade and economic development are now moving to protect themselves from what is emerging as a full scale systemic and fiat currency crisis for the dollar and the entire Western financial system. 

These developments are hastening the end of the petrodollar era and the dollar’s role as a reserve currency.  A central Asian replacement is planned to be a new super-currency used for cross-border payments, based on an index of a basket of commodities and currencies of the participating nations. Including currencies is a mistake, but otherwise the proposition has merit. 

This article explains why and how a properly constructed scheme would work. I demonstrate why it could act as a de facto gold standard.

Its designers intend this new trade currency to appeal to other important nations, such as Saudi Arabia, into using a commodity-linked currency for settling their trade payments, replacing the dying petrodollar. But its success could prove to be fatal for the fiat dollar and other Western currencies. With the demise of the dollar, the new super-currency can be expected to lead eventually to some national currencies adopting gold standards.

The ending of the petrodollar era

Put Ukraine to one side, it’s not the major issue. We should realise what really matters to us all is the real war, which is Russia’s attempts to banish American hegemony in Europe. While in the West we have an image of President Putin as an evil despot determined to take Ukraine back under Russian control, in a speech at St Petersburg’s International Economic Forum this week, Putin’s diagnosis of the West’s problems was more to the point than anything you will hear from our own Dear Leaders: Joe, Boris, Emmanuel, Olaf, et al. It is worth citing relevant extracts from the official English translation of Putin’s speech to highlight his economic understanding of the pickle we in the West have got ourselves into:

“Surging inflation in product and commodity markets had become a fact of life long before the events of this year. The world has been driven into this situation, little by little, by many years of irresponsible macroeconomic policies pursued by the G7 countries, including uncontrolled emission and accumulation of unsecured debt. These processes intensified with the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, when supply and demand for goods and services drastically fell on a global scale…

“Because they could not or would not devise any other recipes, the governments of the leading Western economies simply accelerated their money-printing machines. Such a simple way to make up for unprecedented budget deficits…

“I have already cited this figure: over the past two years, the money supply in the United States has grown by more than 38 percent. Previously, a similar rise took decades, but now it grew by 38 percent or 5.9 trillion dollars in two years. By comparison, only a few countries have a bigger gross domestic product. The EU's money supply has also increased dramatically over this period. It grew by about 20 percent, or 2.5 trillion euros.

“Lately, I have been hearing more and more about the so-called – please excuse me, I really would not like to do this here, even mention my own name in this regard, but I cannot help it – we all hear about the so-called ‘Putin inflation’ in the West. When I see this, I wonder who they expect would buy this nonsense – people who cannot read or write, maybe. Anyone literate enough to read would understand what is actually happening.

“The rising prices, accelerating inflation, shortages of food and fuel, petrol, and problems in the energy sector are the result of system-wide errors the current US administration and European bureaucracy have made in their economic policies. That is where the reasons are, and only there.”[i]

Putin shows that he has at least a superficial understanding of where the West has erred with its neo-Keynesian monetary and economic policies. While some of the economic and monetary elements in his address can be criticised, Putin’s grasp of these subjects puts him head and shoulders above his opposite numbers in the G7.

It is from this disadvantage that the US is trying to impose dollar hegemony on Russian interests in the financial and currency war. We must consider the geopolitics of the matter. 

Not that the West’s mainstream media tells it this way, but this is the story so far. Having chased the Americans out of Asia, the last failure being Afghanistan, Russia felt that there was one task remaining: to drive the Americans out of running Western Europe. Dominating the NATO alliance and with post-Brexit Britain no longer directly involved in the EU, the Americans were redoubling their efforts to contain Russia and hamper the Chinese-Russian partnership, which through the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) is turning many of the West’s former allies away from America’s sphere of influence. As well as the oil-rich Middle East, most notable are India and Pakistan. Imran Khan led Pakistan increasingly closer to China, while India, notionally in the Commonwealth, was a longstanding client state of Russia for defence purposes and is now a member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). Khan has now been deposed, allegedly by American interests which have reinstalled the previous regime.

China’s voracious appetite for commodities has made it the largest donor and influencer in sub-Saharan Africa and Central and South America. Brazil is increasingly involved with the SCO as a member of the BRICS group. Without many people noticing, between the SCO, BRICS, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, Russian-Chinese soft hegemony can now claim to influence states with well over half the world’s population.

Consequently, America’s hegemony is in decline. Yes, the dollar is still the international currency for pricing commodities and cross-border transactions, but the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) is designing a new commodity linked currency to be used as a medium of exchange between its members, and it is anticipated that this will be extended to all inter-SCO trade, SCO trade with non-member BRICS, and even with oil exporters in the Middle East.

Of particular concern for the Americans is the Middle East and Saudi Arabia. President Biden is due to visit in mid-July. And having flaunted his human rights credentials over the Jamal Khashoggi affair he has so far refused to say he is meeting the Saudis specifically. The Saudis say otherwise.

Now that US intelligence has openly blamed Khashoggi’s brutal death on direct instructions from Mohammed bin Salman (called MBS by nearly everyone on the diplomatic circuit), MBS has demonstrated he is ruthless. In seizing power, his disposal of all opposition from other members of the royal family was straight out of Machiavelli’s textbook written in admiration of The Prince — Cesare Borgia. How MBS deals with a weak, elderly US President who has all but insulted him, will be interesting to say the least. Let us just say that it is unlikely to go well for the American delegation.RussiaIs1.pngUppermost in Biden’s mind is likely to be oil supplies, and he will want to extract a promise that Saudi Arabia will increase its production to save America and her allies from the consequences of their own sanctions against Russia. It will be an uphill struggle, with MBS more drawn sympathetically to Vladimir Putin, getting on well with him. MBS runs Saudi Arabia in a similar fashion to Putin’s leadership in Russia.

When they high-fived each other at the November 2018 G20 meeting, the body language strongly suggests that they had a personal agreement between them which was going their way. It can only have been about cooperating on matters relating to their combined dominance of global energy markets the global oil markets. To get a sense of the body language between them, it is well worth watching that incident — twice. It can be found here

 At stake is the agreement President Nixon made with King Faisal in 1973, to sell oil exclusively for dollars, tying the Kingdom into the American banking system. It was an astute move by both parties at the time, allowing Sheik Yamani leading OPEC to raise the oil price from $3.56 per barrel more than tenfold over the next seven years, and to ensure the world needed dollars to pay for it. There can be little doubt that when Putin pulled the same trick on the EU with respect to oil payments in roubles, MBS would have noted the parallel with wry amusement.

The Arabs are not stupid. In 2014 I was told by the director of a major Swiss refinery that they were recasting gold bars for Arab customers from LBMA 400 ounces to the Chinese one kilo 9999 standard. It was the earliest indication I have had that the Arab nations in the Middle East were thinking their future lay more with China rather than the West. And there was no doubt that the Chinese had not only deliberately set out to become the largest gold mining nation, but they were moving to dominate the global physical market, ultimately threatening the LBMA standard.

So good luck to Joe Biden. Machiavelli wrote that 

“A prince wins prestige for being a true friend or a true enemy. That is, for revealing himself without any reservation in favour of one side against another, this policy is always more advantageous than neutrality.”[i]

Given MBS’s track record and his apparent adherence to Machiavellian principals, the meeting with Biden will likely involve some straight talking. From MBS’s point of view, everything is stacked against the Americans. Biden is probably seen by him as a supplicant, which is associated with weakness. Honour, face, and public standing are what command respect in Arab culture, which will work against the Americans.

As infidels, the Americans have laid waste to Arab lands. But as well as a possible distaste for the Americans and their culture, MBS will also be considering his position vis-à-vis the Russian and Chinese axis, which has absorbed into itself Iran. On Russian encouragement, Iran has the power to harry shipping through the Straights of Hormuz. And though it has not yet made any headlines, the Houthis on Iranian instructions could step up their attacks on shipping in the Red Sea. It would be a natural response to Lithuania cutting off transport links to Kaliningrad this week in defiance of the treaty agreed between Lithuania and Russia in 1993.

The Saudis would have to think very carefully about the possible consequences of siding with the Americans in making promises it would not be in their interests to keep. It may be too early to say it with strong conviction, but the days of the petrodollar will probably be numbered when a viable Asian alternative becomes available. And the Saudis know it.

Replacing the petrodollar

The petrodollar’s strength has not just been its hegemonic status, but the relative weakness of commodity exporters’ currencies. Who, for example, would happily pay Indonesian rupiah for their copper exports — certainly not the Indonesians themselves who would prefer dollars.

Nearly all international accounting is in dollars, which means that the easiest decision for any international trader is to simply maintain dollar balances. It is for this reason that foreign ownership of dollar financial assets and bank balances now exceeds $33 trillion, almost one and a half times US GDP. That is a hard act to follow.

Under Western sanctions and without access to dollars, the Russians have said they would be content to trade in national currencies. For them, accepting even Turkish lira — probably a worse currency than Indonesia’s rupiah — is preferred to any of the “unfriendlies’” currencies, which are currently worthless in Russia’s hands. But this can only be a temporary arrangement. Consequently, the Russians are looking for a better solution.

Presumably, Putin will not want to see the rouble exposed to manipulation by Russia’s enemies. And he will have gamed various scenarios for ending the dollar’s hegemonic status, or at least undermining its credibility which will have alerted him to potential dangers for Russia’s currency. That being so, he won’t want to see potentially destabilising balances of roubles accumulate in foreign hands. To a statist like Putin free markets for his currency are likely to be considered potentially dangerous.

Assuming therefore that Russia wishes to maintain at least some exchange controls, there are two separate issues: there is the currency to replace the dollar required for cross-border trade settlements which can be freely converted into roubles by the state and Russian commercial interests, thereby limiting the build-up of foreign-owned roubles available on the foreign exchanges; and there is that of the domestic rouble itself. In common with other Asian nations, government control over their domestic currencies is unlikely to be sacrificed easily.

Plans for a trade settlement currency are already advancing under the aegis of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), a project being developed by Sergey Glazyev. Glazyev is Russia’s Minister in charge of integration and macroeconomics of the EAEU. While planning to do away with dollars for trade settlements has been in the works for some time, sanctions by the unfriendlies against Russia have brought about a new urgency. 

We know little detail, other than which was revealed in an interview Glazyev gave recently to a media outlet, The Cradle[ii]. The new trade currency will be entirely comprised of credit balances at both central and commercial banks, presumably price-fixed daily, giving conversion rates into local currencies. The central banks of participating states can create the new currency by buying in their own currencies from importers and exporters for conversion. Other than the proposed inclusion of national currencies in the basket, it is a practical concept. It is probably the reason the Kremlin is said to be considering it as an option for backing the rouble in future.

That idea of a commodity basket for the rouble itself is likely to be abandoned as unnecessary, while a successful EAEU trade settlement currency can be extended from EAEU nations to both those in the wider SCO and the BRICS members not in the SCO. It could also be an acceptable replacement of the petrodollar for oil export payments to the Middle East.

The ambition is for it to become the mechanism for freeing over half the world from dollar hegemony, including all nations whose export markets now depend more on Asia than the current developed world. In October 2020, the original motivation was explained by Victor Dostov, president of the Russian Electronic Money Association: 

If I want to transfer money from Russia to Kazakhstan, the payment is made using the dollar. First, the bank or payment system transfers my roubles to dollars, and then transfers them from dollars to tenge. There is a double conversion, with a high percentage taken as commission by American banks.”

Having originally had a practical element to it, the motivation for change has now become politically urgent due to Western sanctions.

The problems with Glazyev’s proposals

In his interview with The Cradle, Sergey Glazyev described the new trade currency for the EAEU as being comprised of a weighted index of the currencies of participating nations, bolstered by up to twenty exchange-traded commodities. It is the inclusion of currencies which is bound to cause difficulties. For example, Glazyev said China’s yuan would not be included “due to its inconvertibility and the restricted external access to the Chinese capital markets”. But Russia has also introduced strict exchange controls in the wake of Western sanctions, and one can envisage other member states wanting the freedom to do so as well if they haven’t already done so. The simple and obvious solution is not to include currencies at all. If it is to be used solely for international trade, then there is no reason to include them. And by not involving them, any country simply prepared to exchange its own currency for the new trading unit can join. It becomes a simple one-page agreement.

The objective is to bypass the dollar. To do that successfully, the new trade currency must be a better medium of exchange and store of value than the dollar to encourage the businesses of participating nations to hold deposits in it in preference to the dollar. Simplicity in its construction and transparency in its composition are key. And certainty that its administrators are not going to alter its composition without good reason will be important for anyone considering migrating trade settlements from dollars. This rules out weighting commodities in an index as well because it is only the aggregated prices that matter.

It is clear from the Cradle interview that Glazyev errs badly in his approach. He is muddling a political imperative to conflate domestic currency considerations with those of international trade. Yet he acknowledges that the nature of the proposed currency should permit participating nations to manage their own currencies as they see fit. If that’s to be the case, then it’s a further reason why they are not suited for inclusion.

It is hardly surprising that introducing national currencies and possibly weighting them based on national GDPs, as Glazyev suggested, is making it difficult to come to an agreement. Glazyev admits planning for this new currency started ten years ago, when it could have been done and dusted in an afternoon by someone who knew what he was doing. As an excuse, politics is lame. Make a properly considered proposal for a simple clear structure and either nations sign up to it or they don’t. 

Furthermore, Glazyev’s comment that “The use of gold as the price reference is constrained by the inconvenience of its use for payments” exposes an appalling lack of knowledge about money. Gold very rarely circulates as money, almost always hoarded as the last and not the first means of payment. It is credible substitutes for gold that circulate. Any fiat currency can be turned into a gold substitute by an issuer prepared to exchange its currency on demand on pre-agreed terms. Glazyev should have known this.

Nevertheless, so long as a commodity-based currency is used and accumulated only for cross-border transactions, it can be a practical proposition. The appropriateness and durability of a properly constructed supranational currency for trade purposes is our next topic.

How durable will a commodity-based trade currency be?

The long-term success of any currency depends on its stability — stability in terms of its purchasing power and acceptability as a medium of exchange, values which have been lost in the fiat dollar-centric world. 

In the planning of such a currency there are issues to be addressed. Such a currency is a creature of government and not its users, so its users must be satisfied with its properties and credibility. For a commodity-based currency to operate, it must be supplied by participating central banks in return for buying in their own currencies. Thus, an exporter paid in a local currency can convert it immediately into the new super-currency. Or an importer can buy it from its central bank on payment of local currency. These transactions can be routed through commercial banks having deposit accounts with their central bank.

For these transactions to take place require daily, or even twice-daily fixings indexed in all participating currencies.

The only transactions involving dollars will be conducted directly with commodity exchanges and suppliers not in the scheme, so cannot be settled in the new trade currency. For it to be otherwise the US authorities would have to be included in the scheme and the participating members would probably veto that anyway. But non-American banks prepared to issue and deal in offshore dollar credit and domiciled in a participating nation would be able to do so. The most likely candidates for this trade would be the Chinese banks, and import/export banks or divisions of banks established for the purpose. Currency hedging facilities and associated instruments would probably evolve in secondary markets where there is demand for them. And when a commodity exporter seeks settlement in the new trade currency it would be done with reference to the buyer’s currency, converted by the national central bank at the daily fix into the new trade currency.

Designing the new currency

Given Glazyev’s interview with The Cradle, we cannot say for sure that these issues will be credibly addressed. But we can assess the likely success of a commodity-based currency which is properly designed. 

It must work as if it is a gold substitute. Unlike many of their Western counterparts, Eurasian traders and consumers have not forgotten that gold is money. And while a pure gold standard would be the simplest and best solution by far, the likelihood of a new statist currency succeeding must be measured against the people’s preferred money —gold.

Russia is the world’s largest exporter of energy and given that the EAEU’s new monetary committee is run by a senior Russian, we can expect the oil price to be included in the commodity basket. Furthermore, energy is the most fundamental of all commodities. The history of oil prices provides a guide to the challenges to be addressed by its inclusion. Figure 1 shows the oil price in three major currencies and priced in gold from 1950.

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 In sterling, the price of oil has soared 83 times since 1950, in dollars 39 times, in euros (and before 2000 in relatively stable Deutsche marks) 15 times. If euros in their current form had existed earlier, we can be sure that the oil price in euros would have risen far more. 

In gold, the price has fallen 30%. Knowing that sound money is gold, and the currencies are backed by nothing more than faith and credit in the issuing governments, it is noticeable how nearly all the price volatility is not in oil itself, but in the currencies.

This cuts across the basic understanding that in any economic transaction where a medium of exchange is used, all price objectivity should be in the medium of exchange and all price subjectivity is in the goods or services being exchanged. For the parties in a transaction, even though a seller of goods prefers currency to the goods and the buyer prefers the goods to the currency, they can both agree that a dollar is a dollar, and any variation in value is confined to the goods.

Investment and industry analysts never question the objectivity of currencies, assuming all predicted price changes are in the investment or commodity analysed. Even technical analysts with their charts fall into this trap. Readers of this nonsense usually expect to be given price forecasts. And the answer is always based on an assessment of expected supply and demand for XYZ, and never ever couched in these more correct terms: “We can model the likely changes in supply and demand for XYZ, but cannot forecast price effect because we don’t know how the currency might change over time.”

The origin of price objectivity in the currency and price subjectivity in goods and services stems from the economic theory of marginal pricing formulated by Carl Menger in the 1870s and subsequently developed by Austrian economists. Being fully exchangeable for gold coin, currencies at that time took on the characteristics of money proper, and Menger’s findings describe the relationship between sound money and goods, which was valid for currencies on a credible gold standard. With the abandonment of all forms of gold backing in 1971, fiat currencies became free to vary in purchasing power. While participants in transactions believe the objective/subjective relationship under a gold standard is still the case today, there is an additional chapter yet to be written on price theory as Figure 1 above demonstrates.

Until that is done, everyone remains unconsciously wedded to the gold standard’s pure objective/subjective relationship with respect to fiat currencies. But then the general understanding of catallactics (the theory of exchange ratios and economics of prices) was never that great anyway and has almost vanished following the Keynesian revolution.

The value of one commodity, good, or service will vary against those of the others depending on relative demand for it. Therefore, under the artificial condition of no change in the quantity of money, currency, and credit and assuming there is no change in the propensity of the population of consumers and producers in aggregate to retain their available liquidity, some prices will rise, and others fall. Even then, we still cannot claim, as Leon Walrus of the Lausanne school attempted, that the whole pricing system equilibrates. But there is no doubt that not only do values of commodities vary against each other, but a basket of them represented in an index can be expected to be a relative stable measure of purchasing power as experience with the gold price of oil suggests.

This is why metallic money is fundamentally sound. Over the millennia gold, silver, and copper have proved to be the best forms of media of exchange. And gold, with its durability, restricted quantity, and the fact that it is not consumed, emerged as the preferred money standard in the nineteenth century. It is said that its purchasing power for common items in Roman times is similar to their equivalents today. And this is certainly evident from Diocletian’s edict on prices issued 1,700 years ago.

In Figure 1 above, that the gold price of oil has varied little from 1950 to the current day confirms that the objectivity of prices in gold is a valid argument, while measured in fiat currencies it is not. We can go further and illustrate the point in other commodities. Figure 2 shows the end of year prices of copper in dollars and gold.

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That copper has become 70% cheaper in sound money over the last 120 years makes sense. While demand has increased, it has seen supplies increase as well. New deposits have been found, and the extraction costs per unit of output have fallen as mining methods and technological improvements have developed. These have more than supplied demand for new uses for the metal.

As a commonly used metal, demand for copper is widely acknowledged as a forward indicator of overall economic conditions. Doctor Copper is so named. As crude oil is to energy, copper is to base metals.

Figure 3 shows prices for scrap iron and steel, central to construction and other basic industries.

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Since 1934, scrap prices have risen 69 times in dollars, but only 32% in gold. Again, the chart confirms that for a key material, priced in sound money it is little changed over nearly ninety years.

We can see from only three key components that a basket of commodities used for determining the exchange rate for a new trade currency will ensure the currency retains its purchasing power over time and can be expected to act as a far better trade or reserve store of value than the fiat dollar. It would be the closest equivalent to a gold substitute without the involvement of gold itself. If such a currency becomes properly established, then irrespective of US monetary policies the dollar is likely to be discarded for trade settlement purposes between the nations in the EAEU, the SCO, Brazil as the non-Asian BRICS participant, and potentially all their commodity and trade counterparties in Africa South America, and the Middle East.

The strength of such a scheme is that the trade currency would be chosen by its users in preference to the dollar — the commodity suppliers, manufacturers, and import-exporters — not their governments. The American hegemonic practices of leaning on governments and organisations such as OPEC to only trade in dollars would no longer work. 

But the success of a new trade currency raises a question over the future of the $33 trillion of foreign-owned US financial assets and deposit balances. If the scheme gets off the ground successfully, the impact on the dollar will almost certainly be for foreign interests to unwind these assets substantially, to replace them with balances in the new trade currency. Foreign-owned capital would be withdrawn from the US economy in devastating quantities.

A further question is then raised over the common practice of pricing all commodities in dollars. A new trade currency indexed to commodities but whose only exchange value is with currencies of the issuers signed up to participate cannot easily be used to price individual commodities on a continual basis. So long as the dollar’s credibly exists, prices are likely to continue to be set in dollars. But the superiority of a properly constructed trade currency can be expected to undermine the dollar’s purchasing power to the extent that markets are likely to finally abandon it as an objective means of commodity value. The solution is obvious: the best medium of exchange for commodity pricing purposes is gold itself, even if represented by a credible currency and credit substitute.

It is hard to conclude otherwise. A trade currency based on a basket of goods is, in effect, a means of reintroducing gold as the money-standard in which all commodities are priced. It will encourage fiat currencies everywhere to be converted into credible gold substitutes to survive.

The financial war— the endgame

This article commenced with the assertion that the real war between Russia and the West is financial in nature, and it has attempted to explain why. Nevertheless, there are many loose ends to consider.

Perhaps the greatest hurdle Putin must overcome (and for that matter Xi in China) is the intellectual corruption of his advisers, who have adopted many of the West’s economic and monetary fallacies. Glazyev’s poor comprehension of catallactics has been pointed out. And in his speech in St Petersburg, Putin referred to economic growth. This is not the same as what users of the term growth think it means, which is economic progress, and is a common error. 

Misled by Western macroeconomics, it is likely that Putin’s advisers will caution against an exchange rate tied to commodities as being too strong, undermining the export trade. Perhaps it is this error which leads Glazyev to attempt to soften the proposed trade currency by including currencies. Even worse, Keynesian-style economic stimulus is almost certainly believed in by Russia’s Western-influenced monetary policymakers.

The best that can be hoped for is that by planning to introduce a new commodity-based international trade currency on the lines described above, Russian, and Chinese economic advisers, understand it allows them to retain the so-called benefits of currency and interest rate economic management for their domestic economies. 

Perhaps they will not see that the dollar’s destruction by establishing a successful commodity-based trade currency will permit gold standards to creep in through the back door.


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