Mounting U.S. Debt and Misguided Foreign Policy
Risk a Dollar Doomsday
by
Scott S. Powell
The
U.S. dollar is getting perilously close to losing its status and the world’s
reserve currency, and there is less room than ever for error on the
international stage. Blunders in U.S. foreign policy are likely to have more
harmful effects on both our allies and our enemies than in the past given the sorry
record of the Biden administration. Should
the U.S. dollar be knocked out of its position as the reserve currency, hell
would break lose across global markets.
With recent memories of Biden’s humiliating
and bungled withdrawal from Afghanistan, there is less confidence in the
reliability of the United States from our allies, and far less respect and fear
of the United States from our enemies. It’s self-evident that the powers behind
Biden favor prolonging the Russia-Ukraine war, rather than promoting an
expedient end to hostilities, because the ongoing conflict dominates U.S. media and diverts Americans’
attention away from disastrous domestic policies and breaking high-stakes scandals
and prosecutions of Democrats and their deep state operatives.
The blame for the Russian-Ukraine war lies
with both Russia and the United States and NATO countries. When the Soviet Union broke up in 1991 and
Ukraine gained its independence and agreed to dismantle the nuclear arsenal
that the USSR had deployed there in the Cold War years, it was understood that
Ukraine would remain a neutral country, and that was formalized in the Budapest
Agreement of 1994.
Ukrainian instability over the last eight
years has had three major causes: 1) A pervasive corruption
in which the country became a haven for money laundering and human trafficking;
2) a disproportionately large influence from neo-Nazis on Ukraine’s politics
and a growing presence in the military; and 3) the unrest of pro-Russian
separatists in the Donbas region of Ukraine and cross-border special military operations
by the Russians that date back to 2014.
America’s
contribution to provoking Russia’s military action in Ukraine stemmed in part
from Moscow’s unanswered concerns that the U.S. was funding biological research
and weapons laboratories in Ukraine, which started well before 2014. The
presence of these bioweapons labs was confirmed in early March by U.S. Under
Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, who acknowledged that the U.S. military-industrial
complex has funded 26 such labs in Ukraine and that they were among the targets
of the Russian invasion. After the Covid-19 epidemic it’s understandable that Moscow
demanded these biological weapons sites be shut down. The failure of the U.S.
to respond to those concerns was a contributing factor to heighted tension
between Russia and Ukraine. In the end, cavalier overtures from United States
and other NATO members providing encouragement about the prospect of Ukraine joining
NATO may have been the tipping point for the Russian special operations
incursion into Ukraine in February.
The fact is that
these activities from both sides were in violation of the 1994 Budapest
Agreement, the core of which was a commitment to honor and maintain Ukraine’s
neutrality.
When Putin undertook
special operations in Ukraine the Biden administration retaliated by imposing
sanctions, cutting off trade, and blocking Russia from being able to move money
through the western Swift banking system. After Mastercard and Visa suspended
operations in Russia, Moscow negotiated a deal with China’s UnionPay system,
the world’s second largest and fastest-growing global credit card network. And
now, almost all Russia’s major banks are rolling out UnionPay credit cards.
China wins, America loses.
Moscow has also
responded to America’s efforts to isolate Russia by offering its oil to China
and India—the number two and three oil consuming countries in the world—at a
20% and more discount to OPEC oil prices, with Chinese purchases being made in
Chinese yuan, not the U.S. dollar. Why is this significant?
People forget that
President Nixon devised a new backing for the U.S. dollar after he
abandoned the gold standard and the convertibility of dollars for Fort Knox
gold in 1971. He astutely made a deal to guarantee military protection of Saudi
Arabia, the dominant OPEC country, in exchange for Saudi Arabia’s agreement to standardize
all oil trading in U.S. dollars. This creation
of the “petrodollar” demand enhanced the reserve currency status of the U.S. dollar
and enabled the U.S. to run higher and higher deficits without fear of dollar
devaluation for almost the next four decades.
Nothing remains static and in the last ten
years China, Russia and Brazil have made banking and credit arrangements in
non-dollar currencies, with the Chinese yuan being chosen as a substitute for
the dollar. China also signed a currency
swap agreement with the United Arab Emirates which effectively enables the trading
of oil in yuan. Now China is circumventing the dollar by buying Russian oil in
yuan. And Saudi Arabia, the leader of OPEC, is distraught by the prospect of
the Biden administration’s stated intention to revive the nuclear deal with Iran,
which is Riyadh’s archenemy. Assisting an adversary of Saudi Arabia that could
undo the petrodollar is so crazy that it raises the question of who is behind
such ideas.
All this comes at a time when America’s
debt has soared to $30.5 trillion, which is a debt to GDP ratio of 132%—an
unthinkable level just a few years ago. While perpetual deficits and
accumulating debt are contributing factors behind our current inflation, the
greater concern should be the approaching precipice of a debt and dollar
collapse. What is needed now is new leadership in Washington that has the
courage to do the right things for the right reasons and puts the American
people first.
____________________________
Scott S. Powell is senior fellow at
Discovery Institute. His acclaimed book, Rediscovering America, was Amazon’s #1 new release
in the history genre for eight straight weeks and remains a bestseller: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1637581599. Reach him at scottp@discovery.org
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