Breaking News Stories
These are news stories filed after the publishing of this Word from
Iranian Oil Exchange
…Declaration of War?
Attack on U.S. Dollar and Energy Needs
Written by Alan Caruba
21 March 2006 -- It’s bad enough that the Middle East has us over a
barrel of oil thanks to our continued dependency on access to its huge
reservoirs of crude, but largely unknown to most Americans, the
Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Islamic Development
Bank have a long-term goal of replacing the U.S. dollar as the reserve
currency for world trade.
In March the Iranians will open an Iran Oil Bourse that will trade oil
and products in the Euro, not the dollar. They will not be alone in
pegging their nation’s currency to the Euro. Syria already does and
Venezuela, another major oil producer, has announced plans to do so as
well.
As David J. Jonsson, the author of “Clash of Ideologies,” pointed out in
a recent article, the United States “relies on approximately 70 percent
of all foreign-exchange currency to be held in dollars because we sell
Treasury debt into that foreign-exchange market.” A flight of
foreign-exchange reserves away from the dollar would depress its value
and, conversely potentially increase the value of the Euro by 20 to 40
percent.
This is extremely bad news for the United States and for the West in
general. While Americans focus on the shooting war in Iraq, we are in an
even more serious economic war with an axis that spreads from South
America to the Middle East. Bear in mind that many South American
nations have been electing Socialist governments and that some Middle
Eastern nations have flirted with socialism for decades. The Baathist
Party in Saddam’s Iraq is an example of this.
Calls for oil independence in the United States have been largely
ignored for the three decades we have known about the vast reserves in
Alaska’s ANWR or those trapped in shale in Utah and Colorado. Congress
has blocked ANWR drilling and in known offshore reserves despite the
increasingly volatile Middle Eastern situation.
The economy of the United States is, in many ways, quite fragile. Just
how broke is America?
A new book, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis, by
Addison Wiggin and Bill Bonner, answers that question saying, “It is
deeply unpleasant to consider the fact that the U.S. continues to rack
up another $80 million of debt every hour, or that our trade deficit has
hit an all time high of $725.8 billion.” That represents a significant
vulnerability. The authors note that, “The renowned Levy Institute
estimates that the United States will owe foreigners $8 trillion by
2008, a breathtaking 60 percent of our gross domestic product.”
That level of financial vulnerability is frightening enough, but key
elements of our economy are also vulnerable. As Jonsson points out, the
high cost of natural gas, the key component in the production of ammonia
and urea, the “fertilizers that drive the agricultural sector of the
United States and the rest of the Western nations,” has caused the
shutdown of ammonia production here and seen it move to nations with
lower costs such as those in the Middle East. Today, more than half of
the urea used for U.S. agricultural production is imported.
In the United Kingdom, nearly a third of its power generation depends on
natural gas. In 15 years, the UK will be dependent on Russia for 90
percent of its imported gas. Japan is almost totally dependent on
imported energy sources and is heavily invested in Iran’s Azadegan oil
field. China has major investments in Iran, importing 13.6 percent of
its oil requirements from that nation and, overall, 45 percent of its
oil imports from the Middle East. China is also investing in Canadian
tar sands projects.
At present, three-quarters of China’s currency reserves are invested in
U.S. Treasury bills and other dollar-dominated assets. If the U.S.
dollar begins to slip in value versus the Euro, guess where China’s
money will go. Currently, its reserves “are growing at an average rate
of $15 billion every month.”
The strategy is there for anyone to see. Control the oil and eliminate
the U.S. dollar as the world’s currency of choice. The Islamic-Socialist
coalition is well on its way to putting a choke-hold in the New York
Mercantile Exchange and London’s International Petroleum Exchange,
currently the world’s leading commodity markets for energy. Jonsson
calls it “the currency bomb.”
About the only good news is that such efforts have been tried in the
past and failed. This time, though, European nations will, thanks to the
Iranian Oil Bourse, not have to buy and hold U.S. dollars to secure the
payment for oil.
Right now, thanks to the indebtedness of the United States, many in the
financial world are anticipating a devaluation of the dollar. Jonsson
believes it could fall as much as 40 percent or more, if that occurs.
If the United States does not embark on an aggressive program to find
and develop its own energy sources, and to develop its own production of
liquid fuels, natural gas, and fertilizers, it is going to find itself
in deep trouble. The good news is that we have centuries of coal and
still untapped oil, and gas hydrates. We could accelerate the building
of more nuclear energy facilities.
We could do much to insure a greater degree of energy independence if we
have the will and foresight to do so. However, the federal budget for
fiscal 2007 “cuts overall funding for natural gas research” in order get
the independent oil and natural gas companies to pick up the tab.
“President Bush is proposing to zero out the entire natural gas
technology program, which includes gas hydrates.” This is the same
president who told the nation that America is “addicted to oil.”
America is at a critical crossroads for its financial and energy
policies and, so far, it appears to be making some very bad choices. It
seems to this observer that it is depending heavily on its military
strength to threaten and/or transform the Middle East. That option may
prove to be an illusion if Iran is permitted to become a nuclear power.
Ultimately, as Jonsson points out, “If regimes like those in Iran,
Venezuela, Syria, Burma, Sudan and Nigeria have the benefit of $60 oil
for ten years, the democratic process, which occurred in post-Cold War
years, will end. The totalitarian regimes with the most repressive
governments will control the energy infrastructure and the access to
freedom and liberty.”
The American Empire is running out of cheap energy and easily borrowed
money.
|