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–The Euro...The New World Currency?
The end of Dollar supremacy
Aljazeera
The Iranian government has finally developed a new weapon that can
destroy the financial system underpinning the American Empire. The U.S.
dollar dominance is coming to an end.
A hundred years ago the U.S. currency’s dominance was referred to as
“dollar diplomacy”. After the end of the Second World War, and the fall
of the Soviet Union in 1989, that policy evolved into “dollar hegemony.”
But after all these many years of great success, this “diplomacy” or
“hegemony” seems to be coming to an end soon.
Iran announced yesterday ordering the central bank to direct foreign
transactions and transform the state's dollar-denominated assets held
abroad to the single European currency instead of the U.S. currency.
"The government has ordered the central bank to replace the dollar with
the Euro to limit the problems of the executive organs in commercial
transactions," government spokesman Gholam Hossein Elham told reporters.
The switch will include not only in the budget but also foreign as well
as oil trade, and assets abroad, ending Iran's dollar dependence.
“Some banks abroad are also willing to go Euro in dealing with us and
there is no problem if some others want to do business in other
exchanges based on their preference,” said governor of the Central Bank
of Iran (CBI), adding that the country’s FRF stands at $10 billion,
indicating a 35 percent growth over last year.
It has been said that he who holds the gold makes the rules.
Will other oil producing countries in the Middle East, members of The
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), follow the suit?
A switch by OPEC members from the U.S. currency to the Euro could
enhance the value of the Euro, the new official currency of the European
Union (EU) which first came into existence on Jan. 1, 1999, further,
ending the U.D. Dollar supremacy.
And despite a claim by Monica Fan, currency strategist at RBC Capital
Markets’ that the news from Iran had little impact on the market "as it
had already been announced by the Finance Minister on Dec. 4 and an
estimated 70% of Iran's $45.5 billion reserves are already held in
non-dollar assets," the impact of Iran’s move on the dollar has
immediately been felt.
Yesterday the dollar was slightly lower against its major counterparts,
reversing early gains.
Fan however, warned that the "more bearish effect" from Iran is that
"the market will suspect this is the precursor to similar moves by other
Middle Eastern governments".
Combined, the foreign-exchange reserves of Libya, United Arab Emirates,
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Lebanon, Kuwait, Yemen, Jordan, Qatar, Oman and
Bahrain carry a total of about $170 billion, Fan said, according to
MarketWatch.
A day before Iran announced converting its dollar-denominated assets
held overseas into Euros, Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi, the United Arab
Emirates' central bank governor, said that "we're waiting for a clear
trend to emerge before converting our reserves into Euros or any other
currency."
The bank holds 98% of its reserves in greenbacks but plans reducing its
dollar holdings to between 50% and 90%.
Analysts aroused fears over Iran’s move, warning it would prompt another
U.S. war in the region. When other countries, like Iran, sought payment
of oil in other currencies, most notably Euro, the punitive action was
in order.
The American President George W. Bush's Shock-and-Awe in Iraq was not
about Saddam's nuclear ambitions, or the alleged link to Al Qaeda
network which the U.S. blames for September 11 attacks, it’s about
defending the dollar, and setting an example that anyone who seeks
payment for oil in currencies other than U.S. Dollars, which is what
Saddam did in 2000, would be likewise punished.
But if the U.S. decided to commit the same mistake it made in Iraq
again; i.e. invading Iran, it will definitely bring an end to its
political hegemony not just the hegemony of its currency, in the region
and the world.
History teaches that an empire should go to war for either defending
itself or benefiting from war; otherwise, as Paul Kennedy stated in his
The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, "a military overstretch will
drain its economic resources and precipitate its collapse".
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