F. William
Engdahl's -
A Century Of
War

Review By Stephen Lendman
2-11-8
From:http://www.rense.com/general80/wilmce.htm
- The Three Pillars of the
British Empire
The Lines are Drawn: Germany and the Geopolitics of the Great War
A Global Fight for Control
of Petroleum Begins
Oil Becomes the Weapon, the Near East the Battleground
Combined and Conflicting Goals: The United States Rivals Britain
The Anglo-Americans Close Ranks
Oil and the New World Order of Bretton Woods
A Sterling Crisis and the Adenauer-De Gaulle Threat
Part II
Running the World Economy in Reverse: Who Made the 1970s Oil Shocks?
Europe, Japan and a Response to the Oil Shock
Imposing the New World Order
From the Evil Empire to the Axis of Evil
A New Millennium for Oil Geopolitics
-
- F. William Engdahl
is a leading researcher, economist and analyst of the New
World Order who's written on issues of energy, politics and
economics for over 30 years. He contributes regularly to
publications like Japan's Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Foresight
magazine, Grant's Investor.com, European Banker and Business
Banker International. He's also a frequent speaker at
geopolitical, economic and energy related international
conferences and is a distinguished Research Associate of the
Centre for Research on Globalization where he's a regular
contributor.
-
- Engdahl wrote two
important books. This writer reviewed his latest one in
three parts called "Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda
of Genetic Manipulation." It's the diabolical story of how
Washington and four Anglo-American agribusiness giants plan
world domination by patenting animal and vegetable life
forms. They aim to control food worldwide, make it all
genetically engineered, and use it as a weapon to reward
friends and punish enemies.
-
- The book is a
sequel to Engdahl's first one and subject of this review -
"A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New
World Order." It's breathtaking in scope and content, and a
shocking and essential history of geopolitics and strategic
importance of oil. The book is reviewed in-depth so readers
will know the type future Henry Kissinger had in mind in
1970 when he said: "Control oil and you control nations;
control food and you control people." Engdahl recounts the
story in his two masterful books, both critically essential
reading.
-
- The story line in
his first one began late in the 19th century when oil's
advantage was first realized, and First Lord of the
Admiralty Winston Churchill told Parliament in 1919:
-
- "We must become the
owners, or at any rate the controllers at the source, of at
least a proportion of the supply (of oil) which we
require....and obtain our oil supply, so far as possible,
from sources under British control, or British influence."
-
- After defeating
Napoleon in 1815, Britain was supreme until America emerged
predominant during WW II. Engdahl explains how: through two
pillars and one commodity - unchallengeable military power
and the dollar as the world's reserve currency combined with
the quest to control global oil and other energy resources.
-
- Engdahl calls his
book "no ordinary history of oil" because what he recounts
is suppressed in the mainstream and what passes for
education in America. It settles for mediocrity, ignorance,
and a barely literate public by design. As a result, people
don't know that US manipulators arranged "the greatest
confidence game the world had ever seen" - a "special
hegemony" to:
-
- -- print limitless
dollar paper certificates to buy every imaginable product;
-
- -- accumulate
endless trade deficits;
-
- -- "inflate (the)
currency beyond imagination;" -- have the government pay
interest on its own money; and
-
- -- create an
unprecedented public and private debt to enrich an elite few
at the expense of the greater good.
-
- So far it's worked
because people haven't caught on, other nations need our
markets, fear our might, and countries like China, Japan and
petrodollar recyclers remain lenders of last resort.
Combined, it let America rule the world, control its energy,
and crush all upstart competition. Washington had a good
role model, and that's where the story begins.
-
- The Three
Pillars of the British Empire
-
- Geopolitical
history for the last 100 years was shaped around the quest
for what Big Oil acolyte Daniel Yergin called "The Prize:
The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power" with two countries
at its epicenter - first Britain and now America with its UK
junior partner that built its rule on three essential
pillars:
-
- -- controlling the
seas and setting the terms of trade;
-
- -- dominating world
banking and manipulating the world's largest gold supply;
and
-
- -- controlling
world raw materials with oil the key one at the turn of the
century; with these working, it devised an "informal empire"
to loot world wealth and maintain a balance of power on the
continent.
-
- Britain's "genius"
was being able to shift alliances without letting sentiment
interfere with its interests. Post-Waterloo, it operated "on
an extremely sophisticated marriage between top (London)
bankers and financiers, government cabinet ministers," key
industrialists and espionage chiefs. By keeping everything
secret, it "wielded immense power over credulous and
unsuspecting foreign economies." By the late 19th century,
however, things began to change, and a new strategy was
needed. Key to it was oil geopolitics as a vital naval
supremacy ingredient.
-
- The Lines
are Drawn: Germany and the Geopolitics of the Great War
-
- The importance of
oil and emergence of continental economies (especially in
Germany) provided the backdrop to WW I. By the late 19th
century, British bankers and political elites were alarmed
that German industrial and technological development began
surpassing its own that was in decline. Included was a
modern German merchant and naval fleet and an ambitious
railway project linking Berlin with Baghdad, then part of
the Ottoman empire. At stake was British hegemony, and
preserving it led to war.
-
- Prior to its
outbreak, coal was king, German output was impressive and so
was its growth:
-
- -- its steel
production increased 1000% in 20 years, leaving Britain far
behind by 1900;
-
- -- its state-backed
rail infrastructure doubled in track kilometers from 1870 to
1913;
-
- -- with the advent
of centralized electric power generation and long-distance
transmission, its electrical industry exploded to dominate
half the world's trade by 1913;
-
- -- impressive
research built the country's chemical industry and made
Germany the world leader in analine dye production,
pharmaceuticals and chemical fertilizers;
-
- -- German
agriculture thrived; it made "astonishing" gains from the
introduction of "scientific agriculture chemistry" and
produced an 80% grain harvest increase from 1887 to 1914;
-
- -- population
growth was dramatic - 75% to 67 million between 1870 and
1914;
-
- -- Germany's
merchant fleet rocketed to second place in the world behind
Britain and at a pace to overtake it;
-
- -- steel and
engineering advances were achieved; and consider another
British concern:
-
- -- early in the
century, British Dreadnought battleship leadership was
surpassed; Germany's super model was superior and that
spelled trouble for UK sea power supremacy; by 1910,
"dramatic remedies" were needed; Germany's economic
emergence had to be confronted, its growing naval strength
as well, and for the first time oil was a factor.
-
- A Global
Fight for Control of Petroleum Begins
-
- By 1882, British
Admiral Lord Fisher saw oil's potential as qualitatively
superior to coal. It required one-quarter the tonnage,
one-third the engine weight, and expanded a fleet's "radius
of action" fourfold. It was first used in 1885 after
Gottlieb Daimler developed the internal combustion engine.
Another 20 years passed, however, before its importance was
realized, and that created a problem. Britain had no oil and
needed a supply.
-
- Up to then, its
Middle East presence was limited, but that changed after oil
was discovered in Masjed Soleiman, Persia (now Iran) in
1908. It secured Britain an "extraordinarily significant
exclusive right (to potential) vast untapped petroleum
deposits" for the country's newly formed Anglo-Persian Oil
Company (APOC).
-
- Earlier in 1899,
German industrialists and bankers got Ottoman approval for a
Berlin-Baghdad railway. The aim - to establish strong
economic ties to Turkey and develop new markets in the East.
Once extended to Kuwait, it would be the fastest, cheapest
rail link to the Indian subcontinent, and that spelled
trouble for Britain. It would challenge UK supremacy and had
to be confronted.
-
- The project was
costly and needed help to complete, so Germany turned to
Britain. London, for its part however, used "every device
known to delay and obstruct progress. The game lasted" until
war began in 1914 and after Britain secured an exclusive oil
development "lease in perpetuity" in what today is Iraq and
Kuwait. Yet competition remained because Germany got the
Ottoman emperor to grant its Baghdad Railway Company full
rights to all oil and minerals on a parallel 20 kilometers
of land on either side of the rail line. By 1912, oil's
importance was apparent, and geologists discovered it
between Mosul and Baghdad.
-
- WW I stalled
efforts for a German-owned oil company, independent of
Rockefeller interests. At a time, the US produced over 63%
of world supply, Russia's Baku 19% and Mexico 5%. Britain's
new APOC was barely a player when First Lord of the
Admiralty Winston Churchill convinced the government to buy
a majority interest in what today is British Petroleum (BP).
"From that point, oil was at the core of British strategic
interests," and the game was this - secure its own supplies,
deny them to key rivals like Germany, and do it if necessary
by war.
-
- That became
London's scheme early in the century when Britain, France
and Russia allied in a Triple Entente against Germany and
the Austro-Hungarian powers. By 1907, it was solidified,
effectively encircled Germany, and it laid the foundation
for the coming showdown with Kaiser Wilhelm II. From then
until 1914, preparations were made for the "final
elimination of the German threat." Included was a "series of
continuous crises and regional (Balkans) wars (in) the 'soft
underbelly' of Central Europe." Three months after the
alliance, Austria's heir to the throne was assassinated in
Sarajavo, and it "detonated the Great War."
-
- Oil Becomes
the Weapon, the Near East the Battleground
-
- WW I was no
different from other wars. Imperial, territorial and
economic rivalries were at its root. It lasted from July 28,
1914 to November 11, 1918 and at a time Britain was
effectively bankrupt, had big plans along with other
combatants, plus a "secret weapon" that later emerged: the
special relationship of "His Majesty's Treasury" with The
House of Morgan.
-
- The conflict
matched the Allied powers of Britain, France, Russia,
Belgium, Serbia, Greece, Romania, Montenegro, Italy,
Portugal, Japan and for its last seven months the US against
the Central Powers of Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and
Ottoman Turkey. The timeline was as follows:
-
- -- on June 28,
Archduke Ferdinand and his wife were assassinated;
-
- -- on July 28,
Austria declared war on Serbia;
-
- -- on August 1,
Germany declared war on Russia;
-
- -- on August 3,
Germany declared war on France and invaded Belgium on August
4; and
-
- -- on August 4,
Britain declared war on Germany, and the world was at war.
Four years later, its toll was horrific, and four empires
were destroyed - Ottoman Turkey, Austria-Hungary, Germany
and Russia. Later on, so would Britain's, but in 1914
schemes and intrigue drove the winners to reallocate the
spoils, especially where it was thought large oil deposits
lay.
-
- Well before 1914,
Britain's geostrategy was threefold:
-
-
- -- create and
preserve an unchallengeable global empire;
-
- -- defeat its main
rival Germany; and -- secure and control the most
strategically important resource - oil that was crucial to
winning the war.
-
- At its end,
Britain's Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon commented: "The
Allies were carried to victory on a flood of oil." Germany
ran short and lost because it couldn't mount a decisive
offensive in 1918. In 1915, however, Britain gambled and
lost. It failed to defeat Turkey in the Battle of Gallipoli,
and the stakes involved were high - to secure Russia's rich
Baku oil fields at a time they supplied almost a fifth of
world production. It was early in the war, Britain
ultimately prevailed, and in no small measure by
preemptively occupying Baku in August, 1918 to deny Germany
its vital resources.
-
- Throughout the war,
oil's importance was key and the reason for the Allies'
secret 1916 Sykes-Picot agreement. It spelled "betrayal and
Britain's intent to....control....the undeveloped petroleum
reserves of the Arabian Gulf after the war." Britain was
devious. While France and Germany clashed along the Western
Front, London moved 1.4 million troops to the Gulf and
eastern Mediterranean on the pretext of bolstering Russia.
After 1918, a million forces remained on what became a
"British Lake" by 1919 with access to the region's oil. Its
potential was later learned, France was cheated out of its
share, Saudi Arabia's value was unknown, and turned out to
be a major British blunder that didn't elude America in the
1930s.
-
- Partitioning the
Ottoman Empire proceeded post-war and included an
"extraordinary new element." Now known as the Balfour
Declaration, it was a classified British policy statement
supporting a Jewish homeland in Palestine at a time Jews
comprised 1% of the population. It came on November 2, 1917,
a year of conflict remained, and it was the basis for the
post-1919 British mandate over Palestine that gave London
"strategic possibilities of enormous importance." British
elites and its principal think tank (the Royal Institute for
International Affairs or Chatham House) supported a
"Jewish-dominated Palestine, beholden to England for its
survival (and) surrounded by a balkanized group of
squabbling Arab states."
-
- The scheme was to
link England's colonial possessions from South Africa's gold
and diamond mines, north to Egypt and the Suez canal,
through Mesopotamia (Iraq and Kuwait), Persia (Iran) and
East into India and what today is Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Controlling this territory became crucial. It meant
dominating the world's most strategically valuable resources
before their vast potential was realized.
-
- Combined and
Conflicting Goals: The United States Rivals Britain
-
- Britain was the
world's major post-WW I power, its territorial winner, and
borrowed Wall Street money secured the victory, but with a
problem. The country was deeply in debt, mired in
depression, and the US now loomed as the world's economic
power. In the 1920s, a rivalry ensued pitting America
against Britain's three imperial pillars: control of world
sea lanes, its banking and finance, and its strategic raw
materials. At stake was whether London or Washington would
be the world's new capital, with no assured winner at the
time. Later, it was very clear that WW II's seeds were
planted in a place called Versailles and a 1919 treaty in
its name.
-
- Its terms were
outrageous and onerous. They made unimaginable demands, and
therein lay the problem. In May 1921, Germany got an
ultimatum with six days to accept or the industrial Ruhr
Valley would be militarily occupied. Even worse, the country
lost its colonial possessions and all their raw material
resources. In the end, all combatants were losers. Their
combined debt overwhelmed world finance and monetary policy
from 1919 to the 1929 Wall Street crash. The entire pyramid
was built on punitive war debts with Morgan and other major
New York banks uncompromising on the terms. They was so
burdensome that yearly payments exceeded America's annual
1920s foreign trade. In addition, paying it took precedence
over rebuilding and modernizing war-torn European economies.
-
- At the same time,
oil's importance grew as Britain exploited the spoils at
France and America's expense. In March 1921, Winston
Churchill was UK secretary of state for colonial affairs,
the British Colonial Office Middle East Department was
established, and Mesopotamia was renamed Iraq and became a
British colony. Anglo-Persian Oil officials got
administrative control, American companies gained no British
Middle East concessions, and a fierce battle raged over the
region's oil throughout the 1920s. Then it moved to Latin
America.
-
- In the 19th
century, US Senator Henry Cabot Lodge stated "commerce
follows the flag" and by it meant economic progress requires
expansion. In 1912, it got Mexico targeted after oil was
discovered in Tampico in 1910. Woodrow Wilson sent in troops
to seize control from Britain and the UK-connected Mexican
Eagle Oil Company that had concessions for half the
country's oil at the time. As war in Europe loomed, Britain
backed off, and America secured Tampico's enormous
potential.
-
- Britain,
nonetheless, pressed on, and by the early 1920s controlled
"a formidable arsenal of apparently private companies" that,
in fact, let His Majesty's government "dominate and
ultimately control all" major world oil-containing regions.
Four companies were empowered that were also an "integral
part of British secret intelligence activities:"
-
- -- Royal Dutch
Shell that rivaled Rockefeller's Standard Oil, even in
America through California Oil Fields and Oklahoma-based
Roxana Petroleum;
-
- -- the
Anglo-Persian Oil Company that became the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company and is now British Petroleum;
-
- -- the little-known
d'Arcy Exploitation Company; it was tied to the Foreign
Office and British intelligence, and its agents showed up
wherever there was oil development potential; and
-
- -- the nominally
Canadian company called British Controlled Oilfields (BCO);
it was secretly government- owned as were Shell and the
others.
-
- In 1912, British
companies controlled about 12% of world oil production. By
1925, it was most of it, America noticed, but in 1922,
London and Washington united against a common threat and
called a truce to their post-Versailles conflict.
-
- The
Anglo-Americans Close Ranks
-
- In April 1922,
Germany and Russia stunned the West by their bilateral
Rapello Treaty. Under it, Russia waived its war reparations
claims in return for Germany's industrial technology. The
news shocked the continent, especially as it emerged from a
British-organized Genoa meeting with other strategic aims in
mind.
-
- While secretly
financing an anti-Soviet counterrevolution, London
approached Russia regarding Baku's oil fields, hoping to
arrange lucrative deals for Royal Dutch Shell and other UK
oil companies. Rockefeller's Standard Oil also eyed them,
but was disadvantaged by Britain's favored position and its
own unsavory reputation. Yet it proceeded through Harry
Sinclair of Sinclair Petroleum as a perceived independent
middleman with no Rockefeller taint.
-
- Moscow was
interested because Sinclair had ties to President Harding,
and a deal meant US diplomatic recognition and an end to
Russia's international isolation post-1917. Sinclair agreed,
Harding approved, but events then intervened.
-
- It was scandal in
Wyoming in a place called Teapot Dome. It involved political
influence and the awarding of no-bid oil leases to Sinclair
Oil (then called Mammoth Oil) and a whole lot more with
illegal payoffs and no-interest loans as part of the deal.
Harding, though not directly involved, was implicated, a
year later he was dead ("under strange circumstances"),
Coolidge became President, dropped the Baku project, and
ended plans to recognize Russia. At the time, it was thought
British intelligence was involved, blocked the bid to give
UK oil companies an edge, but Germany's deal with Russia
intervened.
-
- It was Germany's
second option at a time its onerous debt made dealing with
Britain preferable. Efforts failed because London was
hard-line, stuck to its punitive repayment process, and
imposed stiff tariffs to make things worse with Germany
already on its knees.
-
- The looting ruined
the country's economy and forced the Reichsbank to print
enormous amounts of money to survive. Inevitable inflation
followed and by 1923 was catastrophic. In January, the mark
dropped to 18,000 to the dollar. By July, it was at 353,000,
by August 4,620,000, and by November an astonishing
4,200,000,000,000. It was effectively worthless in the
greatest ever (before or since) inflation that destroyed the
country's savings and made further calamitous events
inevitable.
-
- The misery was
compounded when Germany lost its assets. Britain took its
colonies, and also seized was Alsace-Lorraine and Silesia
with its rich mineral and agricultural resources. Gone was
75% of the country's iron ore, 68% of zinc ore, 26% of coal
as well as Alsatian textile industries and potash mines. In
addition, Germany's entire merchant fleet was taken, a
portion of its transport and fishing fleet plus locomotives,
railroad cars and trucks - all justified as war debts that
were fixed at an impossible to pay 132 billion gold marks at
6% annual interest, and with it an ultimatum. Agree in six
days or Allied troops would occupy the Ruhr. Unsurprisingly,
the Reichstag approved.
-
- It made dealing
with Russia essential as Germany sought practical ways to
survive. It proved impossible, France objected to a minor
treaty obligation and occupied the Ruhr anyway. In the
meantime, inflation soared, German industrial activity was
erased, Reichsbank and other German bank assets were seized,
and the currency became worthless.
-
- In 1923, a
so-called Dawes Plan (named for US banker Charles Dawes) was
adopted. It was the Anglo-American banking community's way
to reassert fiscal control over Germany, assure reparations
were paid, and continue the state-sponsored looting. It
continued until 1929 when the debt pyramid collapsed, an
ensuing banking crisis followed, capital flowed out of the
country, its economy crashed, the world headed into
depression, and radical political elements gained
prominence.
-
- Reichbank
president, Hjalmar Schacht, was a key figure. He resigned
his post to organize financial support for the man he and
Bank of England governor Montagu Norman wanted as
chancellor. From 1926, Schacht secretly backed the radical
National Socialist German workers party, the NSDAP Nazis.
Britain also favored the "Hitler Project," support for it
went right to the top and included figures like Prime
Minister Chamberlain and the Prince of Wales (later King
Edward VIII in 1936 until he abdication later in the year).
-
- Throughout the
period, Wall Street and Washington were comfortable with the
Nazis, and a key government official met Hitler in 1922. He
came away saying he "was deeply impressed by his personality
and thought it likely he would play an important part in
German politics."
-
- By this time, the
Anglo-American power struggle was resolved. So, too, the oil
wars with the creation of an "enormously powerful
Anglo-American oil cartel," later called the "Seven
Sisters." British and American companies struck a deal. They
ended competition, kept existing market shares, and secretly
set prices with governments of both countries arranging a
Red Line agreement. From then to now, Big Oil ruled the
energy world and devised how to deal with "outsiders."
-
- Later, the
consequences from Baron Kurt von Schroeder's January 4, 1932
meeting would have to be faced after he, Heinrich von Papen
and Hitler secretly arranged a Nazi takeover. A year later,
another meeting followed preparatory to acting. The Weimar
government was weak, the scheme was to topple it, and it
made Hitler Reichschancellor on January 30, 1933. On August
2, 1934 he seized absolute power as Fuhrer. British
interests backed him, Royal Dutch Shell financed him, and
the Bank of England "moved with indecent haste to reward"
him with a vital line of credit. The rest, as they say, is
history, and from it would emerge a new world order.
-
- Oil and the
New World Order of Bretton Woods
-
- In 1945, the world
had changed. Post-WW I, Britain was preeminent with an
empire spanning one-fourth the globe. Thirty years later, it
was disintegrating and "in the throes of the largest
upheaval of perhaps any empire in history" (although it
happened most prominently to Rome, but it took longer). It
wasn't from "beneficence" or a matter of principle. It was
unavoidable because the war took its toll. It shattered
Britain's financial power, its industry was decaying, its
housing stock was dilapidated, and its people exhausted.
Britain was "utterly dependent on America," so the baton
passed to the only major power left standing in a ravaged
post-war world.
-
- A "special
relationship" between them emerged post-Versailles. Britain
led it then, it hoped post-1945 to continue indirectly, and
a new element was added - the post-war CIA that worked with
Britain in the war as the OSS (Office of Strategic
Services). The relationship continued as the two countries
have mutual interests and jointly share intelligence, except
that Britain now is junior in a US-dominated world.
-
- Post-war,
Anglo-American oil interests had enormous power. It was
assured by the 1944 Bretton Woods system that was built
around three dominant pillars - the IMF, World Bank and
managed "free trade" from GATT. Clauses were built into each
to ensure Anglo and especially American dominance over
monetary and trade issues. Both countries have voting
control, and the arrangement created a "gold exchange
system." Under it, each member country's currency was pegged
to the dollar that, in turn, was set at a fixed $35 an ounce
gold price. It suited Big Oil fine as America by then had
the bulk of world gold reserves.
-
- They also
benefitted from the Marshall Plan as more than 10% of it
went for American oil, and five US companies supplied over
half of western Europe's supply at a dear price (that was
pennies on the dollar compared to today). They profited
enormously, nonetheless, as oil became the key commodity
fueling world growth that without which would halt.
-
- Partnered with Big
Oil and its trade were Wall Street and New York
international banks. They profited hugely from its capital
inflows, and it ensured their advantage that was built into
the Bretton Woods system. They also had cartel power by
having consolidated to hold disproportionate control over
world finance.
-
- Britain, as well,
had its post-war priorities in the wake of its lost empire.
Its leadership regrouped around the power and profits of oil
and other strategic raw materials with US help. It made Iran
a target, Britain humiliated its nationalist elements,
occupied the country, and demanded concessions for its
government-linked Royal Dutch Shell. Finally in December,
1944, nationalist leader Mohammed Mossadegh introduced a
bill to bar foreign country oil negotiations. A bitter fight
ensued, by 1948 foreign troops were withdrawn, but the
country remained under UK control through its Anglo-Iranian
Oil Company at a time Iran's southern region had the world's
richest known reserves.
-
- In late 1947, the
Iranian government demanded an increase in its oil revenue
share (meager at the time) and cited Venezuela where
Standard Oil had a 50 - 50 arrangement. London wasn't
pleased, talks dragged on, and the strategy was to stall and
delay. In late 1949, Mossadegh headed a parliamentary
commission, a 50 - 50 split was demanded, Britain refused,
and by 1951 Mossadegh was Prime Minister. Around the same
time, Iran's parliament nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company and paid fair compensation for it. Britain,
nonetheless, was outraged and reacted.
-
- Full economic
sanctions and an oil embargo followed. In addition, Iranian
assets in British banks were frozen, and major
Anglo-American oil companies supported London. Iran's
economy was devastated. Its oil revenues plummeted from $400
million in 1950 to less than $2 million from July 1951 to
August 1953 when Mossadegh was ousted by a CIA-British SIS
coup. Shah Reza Pahlevi returned to power, sanctions were
lifted, and America and Britain regained their client state
until 1979 when the same Anglo-American interests turned on
the Shah and deposed him. More on that below.
-
- An Italian company
defied the sanctions at the time - Azienda Generale Italiana
Petroli (AGIP). Its founder and head was Enrico Mattei, a
man to be reckoned with. He sought indigenous energy
resources for Italy that Anglo-American oil interests
wouldn't co-opt. It was no simple task, yet he got a new law
passed that established a central semi-autonomous state
energy company called Ente Nazionale Idrocarburi (ENI). AGIP
became a subsidiary.
-
- As its leader in
1957, he negotiated an unprecedented deal with Iran - 75% of
profits to the National Iranian Oil Company and 25% to ENI.
Washington, London and Big Oil weren't pleased. If
unchecked, this type arrangement would upset their entire
world oil order benefitting them at the expense of host
countries. Mattei had to be stopped, and the US and Britain
pressured the Shah to opt out - to no avail.
-
- Mattei became a
major irritant. He challenged Big Oil with low gasoline
prices. He also offered deals with former colonies on more
favorable terms than the majors, including the prospect of
local refineries so supplier countries could be more than
just raw material sources.
-
- Finally, in October
1960 he went too far and enraged Washington and London. He
negotiated a deal with Moscow they opposed. In 1958, he
contracted to buy one million annual tons of Soviet crude.
He then signed an exchange agreement for 2.4 million tons
for five years but not to be paid in cash. Instead it would
be in large-diameter oil pipe that Russia badly needed to
construct a huge pipeline network bringing Volga-Urals oil
to Czechoslovakia, Poland and Hungary - 15 million tons
annually when completed. The deal helped both sides with
Mattei getting Russian oil at below market price and the
Soviets getting a pipe works plant completed for them in
September, 1962.
-
- A month later,
Mattei was dead. His private plane crashed on takeoff
killing him and two others on board. To this day, deliberate
sabotage was suspected, and why not. Mattei was at the peak
of his powers, he'd already signed deals with Iran, Russia,
Morocco, Sudan, Tanzania, Ghana, India and Argentina and
upset the established order. He also planned to meet
President Kennedy who, at the time, was pressing Big Oil to
reach accommodation with him. A year later, Kennedy was also
dead, and the finger pointed to "US intelligence, through a
complex web of organized crime cutouts."
-
- A Sterling
Crisis and the Adenauer-De Gaulle Threat
-
- In 1957, western
European countries headed by France, West Germany and Italy
signed the Treaty of Rome. It established the European
Economic Community (EEC) that came into force on January 1,
1959. Germany was recovering from the war, and Charles De
Gaulle regained power in France with vigorous restructuring
plans - to rebuild the country's infrastructure, expand its
devastated industrial and agricultural economy, and restore
fiscal stability.
-
- It was already
under way in continental Europe, the result of unprecedented
EEC trade-driven growth. De Gaulle and Germany's Konrad
Adenauer led the effort with the French President exerting a
strong independent voice. The two leaders bonded, and the
Treaty Between and French Republic and Federal Republic of
Germany was concluded on January 22, 1963. It assured close
cooperation and coordination of economic and industrial
policy. Washington and London were alarmed at the prospect
of an independent alliance that included Italy under Aldo
Moro.
-
- An Anglo-American
alliance was hatched to counter it. It targeted Europe and
took the form of pushing the EEC to open to US imports and
be firmly part of a Washington-London-dominated NATO.
Britain also demanded inclusion in the six nation Common
Market. De Gaulle strongly opposed it, but was denied when
Atlanticist Ludwig Erhard became Germany's Chancellor in
April 1963. He favored admitting Britain and agreed to
support London's 19th century "balance of power" strategy
against continental Europe. Though formally ratified, the
Franco-German accord was lifeless, and the culmination of
Adenauer's work was lost - stolen by the America and Britain
at the last moment.
-
- Washington
supported the EEC but not as an independent alliance. It
might have become that in 1957 at a time recession hit
America and lasted into the 1960s. It led to debate in the
US with the New York Council of Foreign Relations and
Rockefeller Brothers Fund drafting options at a time Henry
Kissinger emerged. It was also when Big Oil and New York
banks (the East Coast establishment) were dominant and
viewed the world as their market. They also controlled the
media and used it to promote their interests over what was
best for the nation and greater good.
-
- Rebuilding US
infrastructure, investing in modern factories, improving the
national economy and developing a skilled labor force were
ignored. Instead, investment flowed abroad for greater
returns. Cheating on quality also became fashionable, and
productive pride lost out to bottom line priorities to
please Wall Street.
-
- It came with a
cost, however, and part of it was the state's financial
health. As dollars flowed abroad, US gold reserves plunged
enough to threaten the Bretton Woods system. The problem was
a "fatal flaw" in its design. Its rules established a "gold
exchange standard" requiring IMF countries to fix the value
of their currencies to the US dollar and indirectly to gold
at $35 an ounce.
-
- By the 1960s,
European growth outpaced the US, and domestic investment
sought to take advantage of double the returns it could get
domestically. It was the beginning of the Eurodollar market,
and the start of a decade of "ever worsening international
monetary crises." By the late 1970s, it became a cancer that
"threatened to destroy its entire host - the world monetary
system." It also influenced the Johnson administration to
believe that a full-scale southeast Asian conflict could
stimulate a stagnant economy and show the world who was
still boss.
-
- In the 1960s, New
York bankers, Big Oil and the defense establishment
advocated war and a homeland garrison state to boost
profits, but consider the strategy. DOD Secretary Robert
McNamara and Pentagon planners obliged. They designed a
protracted "no-win war from the outset" to rev up spending
and secure the defense component of the economy. Deficits
resulted, the dollar inflated, and Washington forced its
trading partners to accept war costs in the form of
cheapened greenbacks.
-
- It led to European
central banks accumulating large Eurodollars reserves they
then earned interest on from US treasuries. The net effect
was continental bankers funded US deficits the way they do
now, along with China and Japan. Engdahl quoted futurist
Herman Kahn saying: "We've pulled off the biggest ripoff in
history (running) rings around the British empire."
Nonetheless, London planned a comeback with "expatriate
American dollars." More on that below.
-
- Lyndon Johnson
waged war on two fronts, and failed at both. Vietnam cost
him his presidency while his War on Poverty and Great
Society barely made a difference but amassed huge
European-financed deficits. At the same time, industrial and
scientific investment declined, financial speculation grew,
a service-oriented economy was favored, and America headed
down the same "road to ruin" Britain followed earlier.
-
- Few understood that
Johnson's domestic policy had little to do with alleviating
poverty. It was a corporate scheme to exploit economic
decay, curb wage growth and back a 19th century
colonial-style looting. Inciting "race war" was part of the
plan. Engdahl described it as a domestic Vietnam pitting
blacks against whites, unemployed against employed, and high
wage earners against lower paid ones in a "new Great
Society, while Wall Street bankers benefited from slashed
union wages and cuts in infrastructure investment." They, in
turn, recycled their profits into cheap Asian and South
American labor markets for still greater profits. It's the
same scheme writ large today.
-
- By 1967, trouble
was evident. The Bretton Woods system was threatened as US
external debt soared and the nation's gold reserves
plummeted to one-third their liability. At the same time,
Britain's economy was "a rotting mess and getting worse."
Faith in the pound sterling was eroding because the UK, like
America, neglected its industrial base, amassed large trade
deficits, and was a net currency exporter. Something had to
give, and it was the pound.
-
- At this time, De
Gaulle withdrew from the gold pool, and "the entire Bretton
Woods edifice (shook) at its weakest link, the pound
sterling." The crisis highlighted the core vulnerability of
the international monetary system, the US dollar. Things
came to a head on November 18, 1967. Britain devalued the
pound by 14% for the first time since 1949. It abated the
sterling crisis, but the dollar one was just beginning as
international holders of the currency demanded gold in
exchange.
-
- Crisis built in
1968, and Business Week magazine devoted an astonishing nine
articles and feature editorial to it in its March 23 issue
headlined "Gold crisis jolts the West" on its front cover. A
publisher's memo also addressed it and quoted Virgil's
Aeneid, Book III: "Oh cursed lust for gold, to what dost
thou not drive the hearts of men!" It affected Charles De
Gaulle as well. His independence made him a target for
removal that succeeded. It got him voted out of office a
year later. For Washington and London, however, it was a
Pyrrhic victory.
-
- "A Century of War"
will continue in Part II of this review to complete the
story to the present era under George Bush.
-
-
-
-
-
-
A Century Of War
By F. William Engdahl
Review By
Stephen Lendman - Part 2
2-14-8
- Part II
continues the story of "A Century in War" in Part I.
It's breathtaking in scope and content, and a shocking
and essential history of geopolitics and the strategic
importance of oil. Part I covered events from the late
19th century through the end of the 1960s. Part II
completes the story to the present era under George
Bush.
-
- Running
the World Economy in Reverse: Who Made the 1970s Oil
Shocks?
-
- In 1969, the US
was in recession, interest rates were cut, dollars
flowed abroad, and the money supply expanded. In
addition, in May 1971, America recorded its first
monthly trade deficit that triggered a panic US dollar
sell-off.
-
- Things were
desperate, gold reserves were one-quarter of official
liabilities, and Nixon shocked the world on August 15.
He unilaterally imposed a 90 day wage and price freeze,
a 10% import surcharge, and most importantly closed the
gold window, suspended dollar convertibility into the
metal, and shredded the Bretton Woods core provision. He
also devalued the dollar by 8%, far less than what US
allies wanted.
-
- By this action,
Nixon "pulled the plug on the world economy" and set off
a series of events that shook it. Further deterioration
followed with massive capital flight to Europe and
Japan. It forced Nixon to act again on February 12,
1973. He announced a further 10% devaluation, major
world currencies began a process called a "managed
float," and world instability was the worst seen since
the 1930s.
-
- Unknown was the
reason behind the August, 1971 strategy. It was to buy
time before initiating a bold new monetary "paradigm
shift" - to revive a strong dollar and US world power
with it. In May 1973, the scheme was hatched - to
initiate a "colossal assault" on world industrial growth
through a 400% increase in oil prices. In addition, the
resulting petrodollar flood had to be managed. A global
oil embargo was the scheme to rocket up its price and
create an equally great demand for dollars.
-
- Kissinger's Yom
Kippur war began it when Egypt and Syria invaded Israel
on October 6, 1973. It wasn't by accident as Washington
and London carefully orchestrated the conflict while
Kissinger controlled Israel's response. An oil embargo
followed, OPEC prices skyrocketed 400% overnight, panic
ensued, Arab oil producers were scapegoated, and the key
part of the scheme took shape. It was for much of the
windfall oil revenue (mainly Saudi, the world's largest
producer) to be recycled into US investments.
-
- Following a
Tehran January 1, 1974 meeting, a second price increase
doubled the price of oil for even more recycling. The
net effect - the worst American and European economic
crisis since the 1930s with bankruptcies, unemployment,
and in the US, a bonus of stagflation. The fallout was
horrific. It brought down most European governments but
its effects on developing states were devastating. Nixon
as well got caught in the "Watergate affair" that
benefitted Henry Kissinger hugely. He became de facto
president throughout the period while his boss battled
to survive and lost. For Big Oil and major US and London
banks, it was even sweeter. They profited handsomely.
-
- Other issues
were at stake as well, one of which was potentially
cheaper nuclear electricity as an alternative energy
source. By the early 1970s, it was viewed favorably, and
European governments favored building 160 to 200 nuclear
plants by 1985. For the first time, America's nuclear
export market was threatened as well as Big Oil's
overall energy dominance. It got Anglo-American think
tanks and journals to launch an "awesome propaganda
offensive" to ensure the oil shock strategy's success.
The scheme was an "Anglo-American ecology agenda"
(strongly anti-nuclear) that became "one of the most
successful frauds in history."
-
- A second
Malthusian plot was also hatched through a classified
Kissinger April 1974 memo. It was a secret project
called National Security Study Memorandum 200 (NSSM 200)
that called for drastic global population reduction. It
reasoned that many developing nations are resource rich
and vital to US growth. If Third World populations grow
too fast, their domestic demand will as well, and that
will pressure price rises for their goods. Curbing
population growth was the counter strategy. It's also
self-defeating along with horrific fallout for targeted
countries.
-
- Europe,
Japan and a Response to the Oil Shock
-
- By late 1975,
industrial countries began recovering but not developing
ones. The oil shock was crushing and prevented their
ability to finance industrial and agricultural growth
and the hopes of their people for a better life.
Perversely, it was also at a time the worst global
drought in decades hit Africa, South America and parts
of Asia especially hard. The fourfold increase in oil
prices exacerbated conditions and increased developing
states' current account deficits sevenfold by 1976. They
halted internal development to preserve revenue for debt
service and to buy oil. Conditions also let foreign
banks and later the IMF provide loans that became an
onerous debt bondage cycle.
-
- At the same
time in 1974, 70% of surplus OPEC revenues were recycled
abroad into equities, bonds, real estate and other
investments as part of an exclusive OPEC decision to
accept only US dollars for oil. It forced world nations
to buy enormous amounts of dollars and do it when the
currency was weak. This effectively replaced the gold
standard with a "highly unstable (petrodollar) exchange
system." Washington and New York banks planned to
control it and thus benefit from artificially inflated
oil prices.
-
- The scheme
transformed the world economy and began an unprecedented
transfer of wealth to an elite minority. Engdahl called
it "a perverse variation on the old mafia 'protection
racket' game." Third World agricultural and industrial
development suffered so a select few could prosper. It
sent shock waves through the developing world and got a
Colombo, Sri Lanka gathering to confront it.
-
- Officials from
85 Non-Aligned Nations met in the Sri Lankan capital in
August, 1976 and produced a document unlike any others
by developing states post-war. Its theme was "A fair and
just economic development, and its contents stated that
"economic problems have become the most difficult aspect
of international relations (and) developing countries
have become the victim(s) of this worldwide crisis."
Steps were proposed to address it, and they called for a
"fundamental reorganization of the international trade
system to improve" its terms. They also wanted the
international monetary system overhauled and the
"explosive issue" of foreign debt raised for the first
time.
-
- The proposal
was then presented at the annual UN General Assembly
meeting in New York. It was a "political bombshell," and
financial markets reacted sending bank shares and the
dollar lower. The fear was a potential alliance between
key oil producing states and continental Europe and
Japan. If in place, it could challenge Anglo-American
dominance, had to be confronted, and Henry Kissinger got
the job with "the full power and force of the US
government." He warned EEC foreign ministers and
disrupted any efforts they were considering to ally with
OPEC and the non-aligned group.
-
- Coordinating
with Britain, he also forced key non-aligned nation
strategists out of office within months of their
declaration. The threat was thwarted and leading New
York and London banks took full advantage. They turned
on the spigot and increased lending to developing
nations under draconian IMF terms.
-
- Down but not
out, North-South cooperation resurfaced in new ways. In
late 1975, Brazil contracted with Germany to build a
nuclear power plant complex. A similar deal was made
with France for an experimental fast breeder reactor.
Mexico as well decided to go nuclear for part of its
electricity to conserve oil and so did Pakistan and
Iran. The Shah's oil revenues were substantial, and his
idea was "to realize an old dream" - to create a modern
energy infrastructure, built around nuclear power
generation, that would transform the entire Middle
East's power needs. In 1978, Iran had the world's fourth
largest nuclear program, the largest among developing
states, and the plan was for 20 new reactors by 1995.
-
- The idea was
simple - to diversify from Iran's dependence on oil and
weaken Washington and London's pressure to recycle
petrodollars. Also involved was investing in leading
European companies to ally with the continent.
Washington was alarmed and tried to block the plan but
failed. Nonetheless, the Carter administration continued
Kissinger's strategy behind a phony "human rights" mask.
In reality, the game was unchanged - limit Third World
growth and maintain dollar hegemony. It failed miserably
but threats to dollar dominance were stalled for a time.
-
- They resurfaced
in June, 1978 on the initiative of France and Germany.
Responding to policy disagreements and a fluctuating
dollar, they took steps to create a European currency
zone and proposed Phase I of the European Monetary
System (EMS) under which central banks of EEC countries
agreed to stabilize their currencies relative to each
other. EMS became operational in 1979 with notable
positive results. This worried Washington and London as
a threat to petrodollar supremacy, Britain refused to be
an EMS partner, and Carter was unable to dissuade
Germany from pursuing a nuclear option. The situation
required drastic action.
-
- It began in
November 1978 with a White House Iran task force that
recommended Washington end support for the Shah and
replace him with Ayatollah Khomeini, then living in
France. It would be by the same type coup that overthrew
the Iranian government in 1953 along with broader aims
that again are in play in the region.
-
- Key then (and
now) was to balkanize the Middle East along tribal and
religious lines - a simple divide and conquer strategy
that worked in the 1990s Balkan wars. The aim was to
create an "Arc of Crisis" that would spread to Central
Asia and the Soviet Union. Another 1978 event
highlighted the urgency. At the time, the Shah was
negotiating a 25-year oil agreement with British
Petroleum (BP), but talks broke down in October. BP
demanded exclusive rights to future Iranian output but
refused to guarantee oil purchases. The Shah balked and
was on the verge of independently seeking new buyers
with eager ones lined up in Germany, France, Japan and
elsewhere.
-
- Washington and
London were alarmed and acted. They implemented
destabilization plans, starting with cutting Iranian oil
purchases. Economic pressures followed, and trained US
and UK agitators exacerbated them by fanning religious
discontent and overall turmoil. Oil strikes as well were
used. They crippled production and made things worse.
American security advisors recommended Iran's Savak
secret police use repressive tactics to maximize
antipathy to the Shah. The Carter administration
cynically protested human rights abuses, and BBC
correspondents exaggerated anti-Shah protests to rev up
hysteria against him. At the same time, it gave Khomeini
an open platform to speak and prevented the Shah from
replying.
-
- Things came to
a head in January, 1979 when he fled the country, and
Khomeini returned to Tehran and proclaimed a theocratic
state. Chaos was unleashed, and by May the new regime
cancelled plans for further nuclear reactor development.
At the same time, Iran's oil exports were cut off, and
the Saudis inexplicably cut their own in January. Spot
prices skyrocketed, and a second oil shock ensued that
was as deviously conceived as the first one. Then it got
worse. In October, newly appointed Fed Chairman Paul
Volker unleashed a new scheme that turned calamity into
catastrophe by design.
-
- It was a
radical new monetary policy on the pretext of "squeezing
inflation out of the system." In fact, it was
made-in-Washington fraud to preserve dollar hegemony,
make it the world's most sought currency, and crush
industrial growth to let political and financial power
prop up dollar strength. Volker succeeded by raising
interest rates from 10% to 16% and finally 20% in weeks.
World policy makers were stunned, economies plunged into
the deepest recession since the 1930s, and the dollar
began an extraordinary five year ascent.
-
- The combined
effect of oil and Volker shocks took "the bloom off the
nuclear rose" and ended its threat to Anglo-American oil
supremacy. And if more was needed it came on March 28,
1979 in the middle of Pennsylvania at a place called
Three Mile Island. Conveniently, at the same time The
China Syndrome was released that fictionalized the
ongoing event. The combined effect was public hysteria,
and later investigation revealed critical valves had
illegally been closed. In addition, FEMA controlled all
news to create panic. The scheme worked, and
Anglo-American supremacy was reasserted over the
industrial and financial world. Nothing is stable
forever, however, and within a decade new rumblings
would be felt.
-
- Imposing
the New World Order
-
- The combined
effects of two oil shocks and resulting inflation
created a new US "landed aristocracy" while the vast
majority of Americans saw their living standards sink.
It was the same type scheme Margaret Thatcher imposed on
Britain when she declared "there is no alternative."
Preaching free market hokum, she claimed deficit
spending was the culprit, not two oil shocks causing 18%
UK inflation. Her remedy - kill the patient to save it
by cutting the money supply and government spending
while sharply hiking interest rates to 17% in weeks,
thereby causing depression she called the "Thatcher
revolution." Engdahl had another view saying: "Never in
modern history had an industrialized nation undergone
such (a counterproductive) shock" in so short a time,
except in wartime emergency. Thatcher crushed the
economy by design the way Volker did in America.
-
- At the time,
Britain's problem wasn't government ownership. It was
lack of investment in public infrastructure, in
educating a skilled work force, and in enough scientific
research and development. Government isn't the problem.
Misguided policy is, and Thatcher and Volker excelled at
it with one mutual aim - benefit their banks and Big Oil
interests by cutting taxes and spending, reducing social
services, privatizing and deregulating business, and
breaking the back of organized labor in their brave new
world order.
-
- President
Carter knew nothing about finance and economics and was
duped into signing an "extraordinary piece of
legislation" - the Depository Institutions Deregulation
Monetary Control Act of 1980. It let the Fed impose
reserve requirements on banks and be able to choke off
credit to them. It also phased out interest rate
ceilings banks could charge customers. Reagan continued
the policies and was bamboozled by Chicago School
ideologues like Milton Friedman. Engdahl called his
radical monetarism "one of the most cruel economic
frauds ever perpetrated." It was that and more because
of all the human wreckage it caused.
-
- It led to the
Third World debt crisis and its horrific fallout. It
willfully immiserated millions of people, and events
came to a head in the summer of 1982 with debtor states
struggling to repay. Their burden was too onerous, and
Reagan and Thatcher planned an example of what happens
when nonpayment is an option. The Malvinas (or Falkland)
archipelago was the targeted choice. It's off
Argentina's coast but was hardly a reason for war. The
issue wasn't Argentina's sovereignty. It was to enforce
the principle that Third World debts must be paid by a
"new form of 19th century gunboat diplomacy." Two-thirds
of Britain's fleet was dispatched, a shooting war
ensued, and Argentina became a test case.
-
- Reagan backed
Thatcher, and it soured relations with Latin American
states like Mexico that also became a target. President
Jose Lopez Portillo favored a modernization and
industrialization policy and planned to use his oil
revenue to implement it. The prospect of a strong Mexico
was intolerable, Washington had other ideas, and a
scheme was hatched to sabotage the plan by demanding
rigid repayment of Mexican debt at exorbitant rates.
-
- It began with
an orchestrated run on the peso in the fall of 1981.
Claims of an impending devaluation followed, and stories
were planted of impending capital flight. An unavoidable
austerity program followed, and the Portillo government
cracked under pressure. It devalued the peso 30%,
Mexican industry was devastated, many businesses were
bankrupted, industrial production was cut and so were
living standards for the majority of the people under
conditions of orchestrated chaos.
-
- Mexico
effectively became insolvent at a time the US was in
deep recession. Nonetheless, the Reagan administration
hatched a plan to solve the debt crisis and save New
York banks. Ignoring the root cause of the crisis,
Secretary of State George Schultz offered IMF medicine
combined with stimulating US consumer purchases as a way
to increase Third World exports.
-
- It would be
"the most costly recovery in world history (and what
followed) was almost beyond belief." Lopez Portillo
failed to rally Latin American support, and his term
expired two months later. US officials then blackmailed
Brazil and Argentina to back down, and debtor countries
had to accept IMF terms that became "the most concerted
organized looting operation in modern history," far
exceeding the worst of Versailles.
-
- New York and
London banks profited hugely the way they do today.
First, they "socialize(d) their debt crisis" by getting
unprecedented international repayment support. Working
through governments and the IMF, they spun off their
debt to taxpayers, privatized gains for themselves, and
pummeled debtor countries by structural adjustment
looting.
-
- That was Step
One. Next came Step Two - restructuring debtor nations'
repayment schedules that included onerous interest on
top of oppressive principal. It caused mounting debt no
matter how much was paid in an unending looting daisy
chain still in play today and bigger than ever.
-
- Back in the
1980s, here are the numbers. Between 1980 and 1986, 109
debtor countries were charged $326 billion in interest.
They paid an additional $332 billion in principal for a
total of $658 billion on original debt of $430 billion.
In spite of it, in 1986 they still owed $882 billion, an
impossible debt trap, and Engdahl attributed it to "the
wonders of compound interest and floating rates" with a
little gunboat diplomacy thrown in. Only one way out was
possible - surrender economic sovereignty and valued raw
materials, or else. Capital flight in the tens of
billions followed, and it became a profit-making bonanza
for major US banks.
-
- In the 1980s,
Americans also suffered. Reaganomics victimized them by
structuring big gains for banks, oil and defense giants
while ignoring the greater good and long-term economic
health. The plan was nonsensical and built around the
largest post-war tax cut until the combined three George
Bush ones (with another coming) may have topped it. They
did in nominal dollars, but Reagan's was much bigger as
a percent of GDP in an economy half today's size.
-
- Reagan and Bush
had the same scheme in mind. Some call it "supply-side
economics," others a "voodoo" variety on the idea that
tax cuts release "stifled creative energies," stimulate
higher economic growth and produce greater government
revenue. The Reagan one signaled "anything goes."
Besides generous benefits for the rich and business, it
encouraged speculative real estate investment,
especially for commercial ventures. It also removed
restrictions on corporate takeovers.
-
- A year later,
interest rates headed down, stock and bond prices shot
up, a speculative bonanza was unleashed, and here's the
bottom line. Reaganomics failed to encourage productive
investment, except for selected defense contractors.
Money instead poured into equities and debt instruments,
high-risk real estate, junk bond-financed leveraged
buyouts, and tax-sheltered oil well and other
development.
-
- At the same
time, infrastructure needs were ignored, organized labor
was targeted, government became the problem, and
deregulation the solution to get it off our backs.
Throughout the 1980s and since: organized labor ranks
declined, high-paying manufacturing jobs were lost,
working American living standards declined, and an
astonishing generational shift began - the annual wealth
transfer of over $1 trillion from 90 million working
class households to for-profit corporations and the
richest 1% of the population to create an unprecedented
wealth disparity. It continues unabated and is
destroying the bedrock middle class without which
democracy can't survive and is already on life support
and sinking.
-
- Simultaneously,
by the mid-1980s, the US went from being the world's
largest creditor to a net debtor nation for the first
time since 1914. Budget deficits as well skyrocketed
along with the national debt, and the true economic
condition was revealed. "It was sick." Today, it's much
sicker and depends on "the kindness of strangers" the
way it did in the roaring twenties until the 1929 market
crash smashed it.
-
- At the end of
the 1980s, a lesser version of it occurred from the
savings and loan industry (S & Ls) collapse. During the
decade, almost $1 trillion went into speculative real
estate, and for the first time banks were allowed to
participate. S & Ls took full advantage in an anything
goes, deregulated environment. The 1982 Garn-St. Germain
Act let them invest in anything they wished with
government-backed $100,000 per account insurance. It
allowed reckless speculation, massive fraud, and was an
ideal way for organized crime and CIA to launder
billions in drugs-related funds.
-
- The 1980s ended
the Reagan era when George HW Bush became President in
1989. It coincided with the fall of the Berlin Wall in
November and breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991. Around
the same time, it was decided to target the Middle East
and its vast oil reserves to counter the fear of a
united Germany and economically expanding continental
Europe that could threaten US dominance. Saddam would be
the victim and an easy target after being weakened by
the 1980 - 1988 Iran-Iraq war and a $65 billion debt to
foreign creditors.
-
- The scheme was
to lure him into a trap (with Kuwait as bait) to provide
a pretext for US military intervention. The rest is
history:
-
- -- Iraq invaded
Kuwait on August 2, 1990;
-
- -- four days
later Operation Desert Shield was launched; harsh
economic sanctions were imposed and a large US troop
deployment began;
-
- -- Operation
Desert Storm began on January 17, 1991 and ended six
weeks later on February 28;
-
- -- Next came 12
years of the most comprehensive genocidal sanctions ever
imposed on a country that included a crippling embargo;
hundreds of thousands died and millions suffered;
-
- -- Operation
Iraqi Freedom was launched on March 19, 2003 and is
still ongoing nearly five years later; the "cradle of
civilization" was erased, a free market paradise
created, and the death, human misery and displacement
toll is incalculable for an impossible to win guerilla
war.
-
- From the
Evil Empire to the Axis of Evil
-
- In his 1991
State of the Union address, GHW Bush proclaimed a New
World Order, quickly dropped the term but pursued the
policy. The younger Bush does as well with focus shifted
from the "Evil Empire" to the "Axis of Evil." It was a
vague construct that conveniently encompassed the
Eurasian continent and its oil riches. To ensure US
dominance, they had to be controlled, especially against
key Japanese, European Union (EU) and emerging Chinese
rivals.
-
- A threefold
scheme was hatched to do it:
-
- -- target
Russia, eastern Europe and all parts of the world to
ensure IMF rules and US dollar hegemony are maintained;
-
- -- control
every country with significant energy or other vital raw
material resources; and
-
- -- maintain
unchallengeable military supremacy to deter opposition
to US-imposed rules.
-
- The catch word
was "globalization." It denies global justice,
globalizes US dominance, and consolidates it by
political, economic and military enforcement. At the
start of the 1990s, however, Japan had become the
world's economic and banking leader and had to be
confronted. A reckless speculation decade left American
banks in deep crisis. Japan operated differently,
prospered and challenged US supremacy. Its influence was
recognized and had to be undercut.
-
- Treasury
Secretary James Baker laid the trap through the 1985
Plaza accord and the Baker-Miyazawa month later
agreement. He got Tokyo to exercise monetary and fiscal
measures to expand domestic demand and reduce Japan's
external surplus. At the same time, the Bank of Japan
cut interest rates to 2.5% in 1987 and held that level
until May, 1989. The plan was for lower rates to
stimulate US goods purchases. Instead, cheap money went
into Japanese stocks and real estate and led to colossal
twin bubbles still deflating today.
-
- The yen was
also affected. Within months, it shot up 40% against the
dollar, and overnight Japan became the world's largest
banking center, surpassing London and New York. As the
country's twin bubbles inflated, Japan became home to
the world's 10 largest banks, an astonishing achievement
for a country its size or any country. Things were so
extreme at the bubble's peak that the value of Tokyo
real estate, in dollars, exceeded all of it in the US,
and the nominal value of Japanese stocks amounted to 42%
of the world's total - but not for long.
-
- Tokyo equities
peaked in December, 1989. Three months later, the Nikkei
dropped 23% or over $1 trillion in value, and it was
just the beginning. From its 38,915 peak, Japanese
stocks plunged to 7831 in April, 2003 with no assurance
that's a bottom. Why and how could this happen? Japanese
officials speculated on the reason.
-
- In 1990, Japan
proposed financing the former Soviet Union's
reconstruction and drew strong US opposition. In
addition, Japan's MITI model was suggested for former
communist countries with Washington dead set against it
for two reasons: it might exclude US companies, and it
would rely on state economic guidance that impressively
fueled Japanese and Asian Tiger growth. It had to be
stopped as America had other ideas for the post-Cold War
era.
-
- Pressure was
applied with threats of drastic US troop cuts that would
endanger Japan's security. The message was abandon
economic plans or provide your own defense. At the same
time, Japan's twin bubbles kept deflating, months later
the Nikkei had lost $5 trillion in value, the country
was badly hurt, and its challenge to America was
dropped.
-
- That was Phase
One. Phase Two confronted Asian Tiger countries because
(like Japan) their economic model bested the US and
threatened it. It was a major embarrassment to IMF rules
that exploit developing states for America's gain. In
the 1980s, East Asia boomed with 7 - 8% annual growth
rates compared to half that in the US. Their market
economy followed state guidance and planning and it
worked. They were also debt-free and unhampered by IMF
restrictions. In addition, their model enhanced social
security and productivity, promoted universal education
and set limits on foreign investment and imports.
Washington had other ideas.
-
- In 1993,
demands were made to deregulate, open financial markets,
and allow free capital flows. Easing followed and
trouble began. From 1994 to 1997, hot money flooded in
and created speculative real estate, stock and other
asset bubbles. Hedge funds (including George Soros'
billions allied with major international banks)
forcefully acted. They attacked the weakest regional
economy and its currency - Thailand and its baht. The
aim? Force devaluation, and it worked. Thailand
capitulated, floated its currency and turned to the IMF
for help it never before needed.
-
-
- Next came the
Philippines, Indonesia and South Korea as their
"populations sank into economic chaos and (mass)
poverty." Prosperous Asian Tigers were humbled, they
were forced into IMF debt bondage, and Russia got the
same medicine plus a bonus. A sole superpower remained
under US dollar supremacy, and US military bases
encircled its former adversary, were closing in, and
targeted an emerging China as well.
-
- Russian shock
therapy was especially tragic. Washington wanted to
deindustrialize the country to permanently destroy the
old Soviet economic structure. Boris Yeltsin complied,
and IMF wreckage was the scheme. A corporatist state
replaced a communist one, and its apparatchiks were
winners along with a handful of mutual fund managers who
made dizzying returns from newly privatized Russian
companies. In addition, 17 nouveau billionaires (called
"the oligarchs") emerged overnight, strip mined the
country's wealth, and shipped it overseas to safe
havens.
-
- Russia's people
were devastated and still suffer. Unemployment is
epidemic, well over half the population is impoverished,
80% of farmers were bankrupted, and 70,000 state
factories were shuttered. And it got worse. Social
services ended, diseases like HIV/AIDS became rampant,
suicides rose, violent crime jumped fourfold, and the
population now declines by about 700,000 a year with
free market medicine already having killed over 10% of
it. Outside a select elite, the former superpower was
humbled, reduced to Third World status, and it created
potential for Big Oil to exploit Russia's energy riches
that were given away for kopecks on the ruble.
-
- Seven oligarchs
grabbed off half the country's natural resources. Their
hard currency profits were dollarized, but by summer
1998 things got out of hand. With the economy in
trouble, the IMF extended an emergency $23 billion loan
to support the ruble and protect speculative western
investments, but it came too late. On August 15, Russia
did the unthinkable. It defaulted and, for a time, shock
the dollarized world. The largest of all hedge funds (LTCM)
bet on the country and leveraged up manyfold. A
financial disaster loomed, the Fed intervened, Russia's
default was quietly forgiven, and dollarization resumed.
-
- Earlier, the
Balkans got shock therapy and became a target for
dismemberment with a simple idea in mind - destroy its
mixed socialist economy that was independent of the West
and couldn't be tolerated. Europe's soft underbelly also
lies between central Asia's oil and the route over which
Washington wants it transported. It had to be brought to
heel, and a US-led NATO was the way. Softening up began
by the late 1980s, continued into the new decade, and
George Soros was at it again. IMF medicine was employed,
living standards plunged, and economic chaos resulted.
Breakup began, each region was on its own, and a lot of
pushing came from the West.
-
- Croatia and
Slovania seceded first in 1991. That lit the fuse that
exploded in a series of Balkan wars. Slobadan Milosevic
became the fall guy, was targeted for removal, conflict
lasted the decade, and it culminated with US-NATO's
merciless 79 day 1999 Serbia bombing that caused an
estimated $40 billion of destruction to the country's
economy and infrastructure. The US moved in and set up
shop in one of its largest military bases in the world -
Camp Bondsteel near Gnjilane in southeast Kosovo. It's a
Serbian province that was split off and occupied by
design. The West's divide and conquer strategy is in
play, Kosovo heads for independence, and the mother
country's objections don't matter.
-
- At war's end,
US Eurasian control was enhanced but not guaranteed as
the contest for Caspian riches is still in play with
Russia, China and others vying for them.
-
- A New
Millennium for Oil Geopolitics
-
- A new president
accompanied the new millennium with a changed Washington
focus - oil is at its core, controlling it is key, and
Dick Cheney's first job as vice-president was working
with the (James) Baker Institute to draft the April 2001
National Energy Policy Report. It projected a growing
dependency on foreign oil, highlighted Iraq's
"de-stabilizing influence," and recommended "restat(ing)
goals with respect to Iraq policy." It also linked the
Pentagon with future energy policy plans.
-
- Core report
recommendations signalled how with a crystal clear
message:
-
- -- securing
foreign sources is key;
-
- -- less than
cooperative governments in volatile parts of the world
control some of the largest sources; and
-
- -- Cheney
highlighted concern at a private 1999 London Institute
of Petroleum meeting saying: "by 2010 we will need on
the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day."
-
- He didn't
flinch saying where we'd get it: "the Middle East, with
two-thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is
still where the prize ultimately lies...." and Iraq is
the potential crown jewel with the largest of all
untapped low-hanging fruit. Immediately on entering the
White House, Cheney & Co. swung into action. They
focused on Iraq like a laser, targeted Saddam Hussein,
and removing him from office became top goal.
-
- Washington
teems with schemes and intrigue, but a neoconservative
think tank was particularly diabolical. Established in
1997, it was called the Project for the New American
Century (PNAC), its goal was unchallengeable US
dominance, and a policy paper was drafted to achieve it.
It appeared in 2000 and was called "Rebuilding America's
Defenses: Strategies, Forces and Resources for a New
Century." It stated that "America should seek to
preserve and extend its position of global leadership by
maintaining the preeminence of US military forces." It
further called for "American hegemony" and
"full-spectrum dominance," and believed achieving it
would be long-term "absent some catastrophic and
catalyzing event - like a new Pearl Harbor."
-
- A rogues
gallery of PNAC members joined the Bush administration
in 2001, key among them Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and
Paul Wolfowitz, and topping their goals was removing
Saddam Hussein. September 11 obliged, the "war on
terror" was born, "terrorism" replaced communism as the
new enemy, its core was in the oil-rich Middle East, and
its headquarters was in Iraq. Removing the Taliban was
just a warm-up for the main event ahead. It was
conceived before bin Laden was "Enemy Number One" and
overnight Al-Queda became western civilization's
greatest threat.
-
- On October 7,
2001 (four weeks after 9/11), America went to war.
Target One was Afghanistan, controlling Central Asian
oil was the goal, transporting it through Afghanistan
was the plan, and the Taliban had to go because they
rejected one-way Washington (double) deal making. They
fled Kabul five weeks later, Northern Alliance warlords
took over, a puppet president was installed, war ended
(for a time), and the focus shifted to Iraq.
-
- Prepping the
public began, Saddam became another Hitler, his WMDs
threatened western civilization, so he had to go. "Shock
and awe" began on March 19, 2003, and Baghdad fell three
weeks later. Saddam was removed, fighting "officially"
ended in May, and to almost no one's surprise, no WMDs
were found because they're weren't any, and that was
known by the mid-1990s or earlier.
-
- Paul Wolfowitz
attended an unreported Singapore security conference in
June. He was asked why America chose WMDs as a causis
belli when none existed. He answered it was "the only
thing we could agree on." He was also asked why Iraq was
targeted, not North Korea and its nuclear threat, and he
explained: "The country swims on a sea of oil" so there
was no other choice with world supply running out.
-
- That conclusion
came out of an alarming September 9, 2001 Oil Depletion
Analysis Centre energy policy memo to Tony Blair. It
highlighted "hydrocarbon difficulties," declining
output, and importance of Iraq as the one remaining
untapped oil-rich country. Securing it was key because
credible geological reports argued that easy cheap oil
was dramatically declining while global demand was
rising, especially in emerging China and India. For
almost a century, world economic growth needed cheap,
plentiful oil. No good substitute exists so controlling
what's left is essential.
-
- Further, if
"peak oil" has been reached, as many believe, its cost
will explode, and one analyst predicted: "Beyond 2005,
the energy required to find and extract a barrel of oil
will exceed the energy contained in the barrel."
Further, he estimated most major oil sources are near or
at peak, for every new barrel discovered, four are being
used, and the only cheap untapped supply left is in the
Middle East where around two-thirds of proved reserves
remain. Five regional countries are key - Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Iran, the Gulf Emirates (notably Qatar) and Iraq
above all with estimates that its potential may be 432
billion barrels or around two-thirds more than Saudi
Arabia's proved reserves.
-
- If true, Iraq's
importance is vital, its real estate is the world's most
valuable, and controlling it unchallenged means
"Washington (holds) the trump cards over all potential
economic rivals," friends and foes. Even more grandiose
would be to control every major and potential worldwide
oil source and transport route to achieve unimaginable
omnipotence. It would be a global-scale chokehold to
decide who gets supply, who doesn't, how much and at
what price. It would thereby assure who controls world
economic development and remains Number One.
-
- Unchallengeable
military power is key and the reason the Bush
administration repositioned its global presence through
a web of new bases. They've been strategically placed
where Cold War geopolitics didn't permit.
Unsurprisingly, they target Eurasia and its importance
Zbigniew Brzezinski highlighted in his 1997 book, "The
Grand Chessboard." He referred to the region as the
"center of world power extending from Germany and Poland
in the East through Russia and China to the Pacific and
including the Middle East and Indian subcontinent."
Dominating it assures the US access to and control of
its vast energy reserves, so that becomes Goal One.
-
- But it doesn't
exclude broader aims, including Africa that will supply
around one-fourth of future US oil supply, according to
some analysts. It explains the Pentagon's AFRICOM
presence that's expected to be fully operational by late
summer and be responsible for the entire continent and
its valued resources that include more than energy.
-
- Swing over to
Latin America and its energy potential. Countries like
Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Brazil and Mexico
are very much in US plans with the Bolivarian Republic
far and away most important. According to Hugo Chavez
and some US estimates, the country has more potential
reserves than Saudi Arabia when its heavy oil is
included. It explains SOUTHCOM'S mission and command
over 30 regional countries with a growing presence in a
number of them and ongoing operations (some covert)
throughout Latin America.
-
- Engdahl ends
his book discussing oil's importance to US "full
spectrum dominance." Controlling it directly or
indirectly through client regimes means holding "a true
weapon of mass destruction (and) potential blackmail
over the rest of the world. Who would dare challenge the
dollar" as the world's reserve currency? And if IMF
rules keep restraining developing countries' growth,
their oil demand will be curbed, so all the more for
America and its key Global North allies at a time when
most world oil sources have peaked. More than ever then,
controlling world energy reserves is crucial to
maintaining economic growth.
-
- The 1970s oil
shocks were warning shots. Today, threatened shortfalls
are real and worsening. We call controlling world supply
promoting democracy, others see the subterfuge, and some
critics feel our imperial arrogance defines our
weakness. Today, America is unrivaled in global power,
and Engdahl quoted the late Edward Said after Iraq's
invasion saying: "Every single empire (says) it is not
like all the others, that (it's special), that it has a
mission to enlighten, civilize, bring order and
democracy (and only use) force as a last resort." It
remains to be seen what's ahead in "the New American
Century," but the evidence so far isn't encouraging, and
that's putting it mildly.
-
- Stephen Lendman
lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his
blog site at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to
The Global Research News Hour on Republic
-
-
Picture of Book-Cover Added by GLF
Seeds Of Destruction
By F. William Engdahl
Review By Stephen Lendman
1-22-8 |
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