Throughout history, empires and their
civilisations have come and gone. During the first part of the last
century, the US quietly built its
empire, first in the
North and Central Americas and in South America. Soon after the Second
World War, the US worked to maximise the advantages it gained, and the
power it assumed, between 1943 and 1945, from its victory over
Germany and Japan,
and as a consequence of massive
Soviet
casualties, and large British debt and financial burden caused by the
war. The USA assumed the leading role in the Western world by, on one
hand, containing the Soviet Union and preventing the spread of communist
revolution beyond the borders of the Soviet bloc; and on the other hand,
ensuring uncontested American supremacy within the Western world.
During the Cold War years, there was
little or no challenge to the dominant position of the US in the Western
world. However, with the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, the knot tying
the basic objectives of the US
global strategy
together began to come unraveled. Once the communist danger was off the
table, American supremacy ceased to be an automatic requirement of the
Western system.
Since 20 September 2002, the US
government has abandoned its former multilateral approach to global
affairs, and adopted an imperial posture known as the so-called Bush
doctrine.
This new agenda is based on militarist
and imperial values with some theocratic overtones. This agenda looks much
like what some people see in US foreign policy at the end of the 19th
century, and the beginning of the 20th, when the US actively sought to
dominate the entire
Caribbean basin,
Central America and even the western Pacific.
Six months after the Bush doctrine was
announced, the new American doctrine was applied as a justification for an
unprovoked war against Iraq by the neo-conservative administration of the
US. Toppling Saddam Hussein's regime without the support of the UN, and in
the face of strong opposition from traditional US allies, was a clear
presentation of a new unilateralist American foreign policy. The 'regime
change' in Baghdad
was not an isolated event, but only an opening salvo in a much broader
neo-conservative agenda. The neo-conservatives 'advocate a paradigm shift
in which the United States spreads American values by asserting American
power-by force, if necessary'. This agenda seeks to reshape American
hegemonic practices according to old imperial doctrines, but with new
post-colonial political and military tools. This was described most
clearly by Irving Kristol, who is considered as founder of the US
neo-conservatism: 'it would be natural for the United States to play a far
more dominant role in world affairs, to command and to give orders as to
what is to be done. People need that.'
Since 2005, there is a looming crisis
brewing over Iran. In the media the phantom of Iran 'threat' is being
amplified across the world. In order to justify a military operation
against Iran, the neo-conservative rulers of the US have started a
demonization campaign against this country, presenting the latest
incarnation of America's enemy, in much the same way
Saddam Hussein
was in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. They have put a lot of effort
into making people believe that Iran is ruled by dangerously crazy people
who are trying to make a nuclear bomb, and that they would not hesitate to
bomb one or more US cities. In view of such a danger, the only answer is
to wage a preventive war. Speculations about possible U.S.-Israel attacks
on Iran have reached a stage of war propaganda by Western media.
A recent report by the Oxford Research
Group revealed that any
bombing of Iran by U.S. forces, or by their Israeli allies, would
result in the unnecessary death of many innocent lives. 'A US military
attack on Iranian nuclear infrastructure would be the start of a
protracted military confrontation that would probably involve Iraq, Israel
and Lebanon as well as the United States and Iran, with the possibility of
western Gulf States being involved as well', says the report written by
Paul Rogers. The report also argues that Military deaths in. (the) first
wave of attacks against Iran would be expected to be in the thousands,
especially with attacks on air bases and Revolutionary Guard facilities.
Civilian deaths
would be in the many hundreds at least, particularly with the requirement
to target technical support for the Iranian nuclear and missile
infrastructure, with many of the factories being located in urban areas.
If the war evolved into a wider conflict, primarily to pre-empt or counter
Iranian responses, the casualties would eventually be much higher.
Many observers view the US
neo-conservative clique and its agenda as a
conspiracy. This
article, however, is based on the premise that they are merely part of a
larger equation of global systemic structures. This view is rooted in an
understanding that vested interests representing the energy, electronics,
weapons, and influential segments of the media and communications
industries in the US are always entrenched in key sectors of
government.
These interests are concerned with maintaining their privileged position.
And key elements of the US economic and political elite are now responding
directly to changes in global conditions that have arisen since the end of
the Cold War. This is not a conspiracy. It is only business as usual.
Since the end of the Cold War, the US
has waged four wars - two in Iraq, one in the former-Yugoslavia, and one
in Afghanistan - and is threatening more. All this aggression is not the
result of a paranoid theory, but simply a convergence of political and
economic interests, traveling under the rubric of 'war on
terror'. This
argument is not based on the image of a few evil people, conspiring in
secret, against the people for their evil aims. However, diverging from
conspiracy theory does not ignore the fact that indeed there are real
conspiracies, criminal or otherwise. In particular, the US political
landscape is littered with examples of illegal political, corporate and
government conspiracies, such as Watergate, and the Iran-Contra scandal.
Having said that the belief in
conspiracy theories deflects attention away from the real geopolitical
grounds behind the political-economic events. Conspiracy theories tend not
to focus on impersonal forces like political and economic structures,
geopolitical forces, market economics, globalisation, and other such
abstract explanations of human events. They are based on notions that all
of human history is shaped by secret societies. While real conspiracies
have existed throughout
history, history itself is not a conspiracy.
The economic power of the United States
was in stagnation since the 1970s and is in decline since the end of the
Cold War. Particularly its share of world trade and manufacturing is
substantially less than it was just prior to the end of the
Cold War, and its
relative economic strength measured against the EU and the East Asian
economic group of Japan, China and other Southeast Asian countries is
similarly in retreat. The persistent use of US military power can be
viewed as a reaction to its declining economic power and not merely as a
response to the post-Cold War geopolitical picture. The American
neo-conservative leaders see the military power of the USA's trump card
that can be employed to prevail over all its rivals', and thus stop this
decline. This is what the Bush administration is trying to achieve: to
create a militarised world in which the strength of the US military forces
can change and re-define the rules of the game. This is a clear goal, a
specific agenda, which does not constitute a conspiracy. It is merely the
way in which the system currently works, and the
US
administration is taking advantage of existing structural
opportunities. This article is an attempt to provide primarily a
macroeconomic explanation to the origins of and motivations behind the
recent US policies shaped by the neo-conservative Bush administration.
American "Dollar" Imperialism
"Imagine this: you are deep in debt but
every day you write cheques for millions of dollars you don't have --
another luxury car, a holiday home at the
beach, the world trip
of a lifetime. Your cheques should be worthless but they keep buying stuff
because those cheques you write never reach the bank! You have an
agreement with the owners of one thing everyone wants, call it petrol/gas,
that they will accept only your cheques as payment. This means everyone
must hoard your cheques so they can buy petrol/gas. Since they have to
keep a stock of your cheques, they use them to buy other stuff too. You
write a cheque to buy a TV, the TV shop owner swaps your cheque for
petrol/gas, that seller buys some vegetables at the fruit shop, the
fruiterer passes it on to buy bread, the baker buys some flour with it,
and on it goes, round and round -- but never back to the bank. You have a
debt on your books, but so long as your cheque never reaches the bank, you
don't have to pay. In effect, you have received your TV free. This is the
position the USA has enjoyed for 30 years."
Since the US emerged as the dominant
global superpower at the end of the
Second World
War, US hegemony rested on three unchallengeable pillars: 1)
overwhelming US military superiority over all its rivals; 2) the
superiority of American production methods and the relative strength of
the US economy; 3) control over global
economic
markets, with the US dollar acting as the global reserve currency.
Of these three, the role of the dollar
may be the greatest among equals. The US dollar is the world's reserve
currency, meaning that central banks all over the world hold huge amounts
of dollars in reserve. As a result of this situation, today America
borrows from practically the entire world without keeping the reserves of
any other currency. Because the dollar is the de facto global reserve
currency, US currency accounts for approximately two-thirds of all
official exchange reserves. America does not have to compete with other
currencies in interest rates, and even at low interest rates capital flies
to the dollar. The more dollars are circulated outside the US, or invested
by foreign owners in American assets, the more the rest of the world has
had to provide the US with goods and services in exchange for these
dollars. The US even has the luxury of having its debts denominated in its
own currency.
How does this work?
The United States runs a balance of
payments deficit by
spending more money in other countries (buying their products, investing
in them, or giving them dollars) than they spend in the United States . -
The extra dollars are held by the countries' central banks. The banks do
not ask the United States to redeem them for gold or another currency. As
long as foreign banks accept and hold dollars as if they were gold, the
dollars act as reserves.
The US economy began to dominate the
world economy in the early 20th century. The US dollar was then tied to
gold, so that the value of the dollar neither increased nor decreased, but
remained the same amount of gold. Most money was paper, as it is now, but
governments were required, if requested, to redeem that paper for gold.
This 'convertibility' put an upper limit on the amount of paper currency
governments could print in order to prevent inflation. This link between
paper money and gold was a product of law as well as custom. The
Federal Reserve,
which was established in 1913, had to ensure that every dollar of paper
money was backed by at least forty cents of gold. There was no tradition
(as there is today) of continuous inflation. The large levels of inflation
and astronomic levels of government deficits during the Great Depression,
1929-1931, rendered the support of US dollars by gold impossible. By the
early 1930s, this led the US President Roosevelt to adjust the dollar/
gold ratio as he saw fit. Until this point, the US may well have been a
dominant power in the world economy, but from an economics point of view,
it was not an empire. The fixed value of the dollar did not allow the US
government to extract economic benefits from other countries by supplying
them with dollars convertible to gold.
The American Empire was born, in a real
economics sense of the term, with Bretton Woods in 1945. After 1945, the
dollar was not fully convertible to gold, but was made convertible to gold
only to foreign governments. As a result of this, the dollar established
itself as the global reserve currency. No one planned this development. It
came directly from the fact that the US was the dominant world power: well
over half of all international money transactions were financed in terms
of dollar; the US produced more than half the world output; the US also
owned a large section of the gold reserves in the world. This became
possible because during the Second World War, the US had supplied its
allies with provisions, demanding gold as payment, thus accumulating
significant portions of the world's gold reserves. By 1945, the US had
accumulated 80 percent of the world's gold, and 40 percent of the world's
production.
The aggressive policies of the 1960s,
however, put an increasing pressure on the US dollar. The US economy
experienced a cumulative reserve deficit. In particular, the dollar supply
was relentlessly increased to finance America's war in Vietnam.
Financially the Vietnam War was a real mess. The US printed and spent more
money than their gold reserves allowed. By 1963, the US gold reserve at
Manhattan had fallen to alarmingly low levels -- it barely covered
liabilities to foreign central banks. By 1970 the gold coverage had fallen
to 55%, by 1971 22%. Before the
Vietnam War,
the US had $30 billion in gold reserves, but it spent more than $500
billion on the war alone. By this time, the post-war reconstruction period
had come to an end, and the European and Japanese economies had improved
their economic position relative to the US, which had increased pressure
on the US dollar. The strain on the US financial system became evident in
1965, when French President de Gaulle demanded gold from the US in
exchange for $300 million in debt.
The situation reached a crisis point in
1970-71 when more foreign central banks tried to convert their dollar
reserves into gold. In response to a massive flight from the dollar, the
US government defaulted on its payment on 15 August 1971 by cutting the
link between the dollar and gold. This was because it seems that there was
no other choice - the US government would not be able to buy back its
dollars in gold. If governments and foreign central banks tried to convert
even a quarter of their holdings at one time, the United States would not
be able to honour its obligations. Hence the Bretton Woods system was
ended. This was a serious crisis inspired by a significant loss of
confidence in dollar.
As a result, the dollar was left 'floated' in the international monetary
market, which weakened the position of the dollar as the hegemonic
currency. Now the dollar had no firm backing other than the 'full faith
and credit' of the US government. From that point on, the US had to find a
way convincing the rest of the world to continue to accept every devalued
dollars in exchange for economic goods and services the US needed to get
from others. It had to find an economic reason for the rest of the world
to hold US dollars: oil provided that reason, and the term petrodollar
became the crucial link in this.
Bulent Gokay
To be continued
Dr. Bulent Gokay is a Reader in
International Relations, School of Politics, International Relations and
philosophy, Keele University, United Kingdom. He can be contacted by
e-mail at
b.gokay@intr.keele.ac.uk
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