Blog Tyrany of Petrodollar

Tyrany of Petrodollar

Posted by Author on in Blog 49


A strongly worded article with some logic.
 
Kausar Bajwa
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US hostilities toward Iran have nothing to do with nuclear
weapons development. If that were the case, then North
Korea and Pakistan would be facing similar sanctions and
threats, but they aren't. The difference of course is in what
lies beneath the ground - oil. Iran has it and the other guys
don't.
 
 
At the heart of the issue is not Iran's dubious
attempt to build nuclear weapons, or even oil,
but how that oil is paid for.
In 1973, Richard Nixon promised King Faisal of Saudi Arabia that the
US would protect Saudi Arabian oilfields from any and all
interested parties seeking to forcefully wrest them from the
House of Saud. It's important to remember that in 1973,
Saudi Arabia didn't have a fraction of the military and ground
forces it possesses today (almost exclusively US manufactured
weapons) and the USSR was very much a threat.

In return Saudi Arabia, and by
extension OPEC, agreed to sell
their oil in US dollars only.  As if that
weren't sweet enough, as part of the deal, they were required
to invest their profits in US treasuries, bonds and bills. The real
zinger is that all countries purchasing oil from OPEC had to do
so in US dollars, or 'petrodollars'.  This strengthened the
US dollar, resulting in a steady US economic growth cycle
throughout the 80's and 90's. Countries purchasing OPEC oil
started buying US treasury bills, bonds and securities to ensure
they could continue purchasing OPEC oil. This worked fine for
the US until 2001.

No plan, however well formulated, functions
smoothly indefinitely.  2001, enter Saddam
Hussein. He floated a plan to sell oil for European
currencies in lieu of petrodollars. Shortly after Iraq was
'suddenly' found to be seeking and stockpiling weapons
of mass destruction - allegations spearheaded by the US.
The world knows what happened, suffice it to say that
Saddam is dead and Iraq is 'back on track', selling its
oil for petrodollars once again. 

Muammar Gaddafi harbored the Lockerbie Bombers and
allowed various terrorist organizations establish training camps
in Libya. He tried to buy a nuke from China in 1972. In 1977,
he approached Pakistan, then India. He sought nerve gas from
Thailand. In spite of well over fifty failed assassination attempts
on Gaddafi by Israel, the US and the UK, Libya was left to its
own devices for the most part. Seeking nukes and
harboring terrorists is one thing, but threatening the petrodollar is quite
another. Gaddafi made a fatal error when
he decided to move away from the petrodollar
in favor of other currencies. This simply was
not tolerated by the US. Having already played the
WMD card in Iraq, something new was pulled from the US
'regime change' grab bag. Within a year, 'internal' elements
rose up in rebellion against Gaddafi and now he is dead.
Long live the petrodollar.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, former head of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), suggested
last year that the Euro would be a more suitable
oil reserve currency than the US Dollar. Within
three months of that statement, allegations of
rape ruined his career, derailing his bid for the
French Presidency in the process. Soon thereafter,
all charges were dropped, but of course, le
dommage était fait - the damage was done.
Christine Lagarde, DSK's replacement as head
of the IMF sees no reason to change the current arrangement, naturellement.

The Iran situation is a little trickier.
The US has sought to dismantle Iran's regime ever since the
1979 Iranian Revolution, so this round of hostilities, while not
new, reflects a new level of intensity. Why, after thirty years of
hostility, has the US ratcheted up its rhetoric? As Obama stated
in his recent State of the Union address, when it comes to Iran
and the insistence they dismantle their nuclear program,
"no options are off the table". By
stating 'no options' this would
include nuclear deployment as a deterrent. The answer of course is that Iran is now
seeking to disengage itself from the petrodollar dynamic. In
2005, Iran sought to create an Iranian Oil Exchange, thus by
passing the US controlled petrodollar. Fear that western
powers would freeze accounts in European and London banks
put an end to that plan. 

But that was not the end of their attempts, and
Iran sought other ways to get around the
petrodollar noose. There are rumors that India,
which imports 12% of their oil from Iran, has
agreed to purchase oil for gold. Energy trade
with China, importing 15% of its oil and natural
gas from Iran may be settled in gold, yuan, and
rial. South Korea plans to buy 10% of their oil
from Iran in 2012, and unless Seoul sides with
American and European sanctions, it is likely to
use gold or their sovereign currency to pay for it.
Also, Iran is already dumping the dollar in its
trade with Russia in favor of rials and rubles.
Iran is breaking the back of the petrodollar.
Others have tried, but Iran is
succeeding. To understand how disastrous this
is for the US, one must have a basic understanding
of how critical a role the petrodollar plays in the economic health of the US.

Through King Faisal, Nixon elevated the US to
supreme economic ascendancy, not unlike
Damocles in his desire to rule. Sitting on the
(economic) throne of the world is great, but
Nixon was either unaware of the sword
dangling over the US economic system, or
chose to ignore it in favor of reaping the
rewards of the moment. 

By creating the petrodollar paradigm, the US economy soared,
as all countries of the world were required to amass US currency
to purchase oil from OPEC nations. Sales of T-bills, securities and
US bonds soared. US coffers fattened. With the US dollar as the
world's oil currency reserve, economic fortune favored the US.
But with great reward comes great
risk. While other countries exchanged their currency for the
dollar, (forfeiting value in the process) the US simply
printed more money to match their needs and
purchase their oil - essentially for free. The best
example is that while gasoline in the US cost $3.00
per gallon, in Europe that same gallon costs $6.00
or more.


 
Herein lies the danger. If Iran is
successful in its bid to set up their
own bourse, or oil exchange, then
what need does the world have for
all those US dollars? The answer is
none at all. As Iran creating gold
and sovereign currency partnerships
with India, China, South Korea and Russia, the hegemony of the
petrodollar will be destroyed. The resulting sell-off of US dollars, T-bills, securities, bonds and assets will flood
the already swollen world economy
with even more useless dollars, ultimately devaluing it into a position where hyper-inflation becomes a risk. 

So, while the US government sabre-rattles and prattles on and
on about nuclear weapons and the threat Iran poses to the
Middle East, the thin veneer of lies spouted by the elite
controlled media is being stripped away, revealing the truth of
their warmongering rhetoric.
The US, by their foolish insistence on enforcing embargoes and

sanctions against Iran, is hastening the end of the petrodollar
and ushering in the age of US dollar hyper-inflation.
A practical example:
One loaf of bread in a healthy economy is $1.00.
In an inflationary economy it's $1.75. In a hyper-inflationary economy, $500.00.

Bullies may be large and dangerous,
but rarely are they intelligent.

Damocles wisely vacated the throne of Dionysius before the
sword fell upon his head, but the US
is foolishly refusing to step down
from their economic dais in spite of
the catastrophic effect current policy direction will mean for US citizens
and the world economy.
 
 












































































































































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