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Iran: Why does Bush invoke the threat of World War III?
Part 3: Globalization, Iran, and the dollar crisis
By Alex Lantier
3 December 2007
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This is the final article in a three-part series. Part
one was posted on November 30. Part
two was posted on December 1.
The important role of oil in US Middle East policyand
particularly in the campaign of war and occupation launched by
the Bush administrationis widely acknowledged, though it
is ignored by the corporate media. Less often discussed is the
role of the oil trade in propping up the US dollar, and thus helping
to maintain the increasingly tense and unstable relations between
the worlds main trading blocs.
These tensions find their most finished expression in the US
trade deficit and the crisis of US industry. Since the economic
crisis and oil shock of the 1970s, the US has gone from the worlds
largest industrial power to its largest debtor and importer. According
to European Union (EU) statistics, in 2006 the US posted a trade
deficit with all its major trading partners: 100 billion euros
with the EU, 61 billion euros with Canada, 53 billion euros with
Mexico, 73 billion euros with Japan, and 200 billion euros with
China. Yearly capital inflows into the US of more than US$600
billion were needed to finance this deficit, as the rest of the
world paid the US to buy the products it made.
In particular, the East Asian countriesChina, Japan,
and Koreahave amassed huge dollar reserves by lending money
to the US to purchase their products. Chinas dollar holdings
alone are at least US$1.2 trillion, and total East Asian dollar
holdings are estimated at more than US$2 trillion.
The material reality underlying this phenomenon in the US (and,
to a lesser extent, in Japan and high-wage countries of Europe)
has been wave upon wave of plant closures and layoffs, wage and
benefit concessions by trade unions, and the shifting of much
of the working class towards low-paying service jobs. As anyone
who has shopped at a US discount store like Wal-Mart or Target
knows, the living standards of the US population are dependent
on the availability of cheap foreign manufactured goods.
The US bourgeoisie has continued to realize huge profits on
such goods, however, by pocketing the difference between the low
prices it pays to foreign manufacturers in the cheap-labor countries
and the prices paid by the American masses. The survival of the
downsizing of Americas industrial base has thus relied in
large part on forcing foreign exporters to accept low prices forand
even lend money for the purchase oftheir goods.
The US bourgeoisie has also partially relied on the implicit
military threat posed by its strategic position in the Middle
East. Simply put, every exporting country negotiating prices with
US retailers must keep in mind that the US can threaten it with
an oil blockade (if it imports oil) or with military attack (if
it is near the Middle East). As has already been pointed out,
Beijings foreign policy in the Indian Ocean and Southeast
Asia shows the central importance of this preoccupation in the
minds of leading Chinese state officials.
However, financial concerns also play an important role in
encouraging other countries to hold dollars. Most of industrys
basic raw materialsoil, gas, metals, grainare traded
in markets that denominate their sales in dollars. This gives
other countries a powerful incentive to accept US dollars in return
for their products, even when they do not intend to purchase US
goods: they will use these dollars to purchase raw materials on
world markets.

The crisis of the US economynotably the bursting of the
sub-prime mortgage bubble and the rapid fall of the US dollar
versus other major currenciesplaces a question mark over
the viability of the strategy of exporting on credit to the US.
The plunge of the dollar against other currencies means that their
dollar holdings generate losses when converted back into those
currencies, and there is increasingly the possibility of a major
credit crisis in the US.
Increasingly, the fall of the dollar is also encouraging exportersnotably
oil-producing countriesto consider selling their commodities
in different currencies, such as the euro.
Such a shift would further decrease the incentive to sell goods
and provide credit to the US economy: US dollars would no longer
be needed to purchase essential raw materials on world markets.
Absent the need to sell on credit to the US, the maintenance of
current trading patterns would represent a very costly political
decision to supply the US market with goods and financial backing.
Though the risk of a flight from the dollar in world currency
and commodity markets is currently described as small by most
bourgeois financial journalists, it is of utmost concern to the
US bourgeoisie and is actively discussed in the US foreign policy
establishment.
In 2002, during a Capitol Hill Conference Series on US Middle
East Policy, former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia Chas. Freeman
said: It seems to me that one of the major things that the
Saudis have historically done...is to insist that oil continue
to be priced in dollars. Therefore, the United States Treasury
can print money and buy oil, which is an advantage that no other
country has. With the emergence of other currencies and with strain
in the relationship [between Saudi Arabia and the US], I wonder
whether there will not be again, as there have been in the past,
people in Saudi Arabia who raise the question of why they should
be so kind to the United States.
Referring to the massive inflows of capital financing the US
trade deficit, Freeman added: I think the issue is the US
balance-of-payments deficit.
Iran ditches the US dollar
Washingtons policy of embargo against Iran and war and
occupation in Afghanistan and Iraq has destabilized this already
tense situation and strengthened tendencies pushing toward the
abandonment of the US dollar by the Middle East oil trade. Iran,
which has no legal trade with the US, and upon which US financial
authorities are trying to impose a total blockade of financial
transactions, is perhaps the Middle Eastern power with the least
reason to hold dollars.
Unsurprisingly, the Iranian state has progressively shifted
its oil sales at the Iranian Oil Bourse out of US dollars and
into other currencies, notably euros and Japanese yen. This event
has gone surprisingly unreported in the US corporate media.
According to a March 2007 report in the Scotsman, Chinas
Zhuhai Zhenrong Corporation began paying euros for Iranian oil
deliveries in late 2006. In September 2007, Japans Nippon
Oil agreed to purchase oil in yen. In October 2007, AFP quoted
Mohammad-Ali Khatibi, deputy head of the National Iranian Oil
Company, as confirming Irans switch out of the US dollar.
Khatibi said: Iran is selling about 85 percent of its
oil in the non-dollar currencies. Currently, about 65 percent
of the oil sale income is in euros and 20 percent in yen.
He also suggested that the remaining 15 percent of Iranian oil
sales could soon be denominated in dirhams, the currency of the
United Arab Emiratesa major Iranian trading partner.
The UPI press service interviewed PFC Energy analyst David
Kirsch, who noted that for Iran, a key motivation is the
US informal sanctions that the Treasury, and [US Treasury] Undersecretary
[for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence] Stuart Levey in particular,
put on banks not to do financial transactions with Iran.
Kirsch also implied that, should Iran be allowed to continue
its currency policy unmolested, it might end up leading a shift
of the Persian Gulf oil industry out of dollar-denominated oil
sales. He said: There is also another key issue that you
are seeing, not just in Iran, but in other oil producers, especially
Gulf oil producers, is given the depreciation of the dollar, it
is better to hold their reserves at least in euros, it is a better
store of wealth. Some of the other Gulf producers will accept
payment in euros.
The geopolitics of the dollar and the euro
In the current tense international situation, the possibility
that the euro might supplant, at least partially, the US dollar
as the main currency of world trade is becoming tangible. The
dollars role in international marketsfrom its plunge
against other currencies to the explosion of (dollar) prices of
global commodities and raw materialsresembles nothing more
than worldwide theft benefiting the American bourgeoisie.
The rapid fall of the dollar risks pricing the European bourgeoisie
out of world markets, as its goods are undercut by US competitors,
whose costs are counted in cheaper dollars. It also cuts down
the value of dollar-denominated profits realized abroad by European
corporations, once brought back to Europe and converted into euros.
This was perhaps most prominently discussed by French President
Nicolas Sarkozy during his latest trip to Washington, D.C. Noting
that every cent that the euro rises against the dollar costs Franco-German
airplane maker Airbus 100 million euros in profits, Sarkozy warned
that monetary disorder risks growing into economic war.
He refrained from adding that Airbuss difficulties profited
its only competitor, US-based Boeing.
For oil sellers like Iran, Russia, and the Persian Gulf kingdoms,
most of whose trade is realized with Europe and Asia, the fall
of the dollar against the euro (and to a lesser extent versus
the Asian currencies) cuts into the purchasing power of their
oil earnings, unless they are denominated in other currencies.
The Asian bourgeoisies, for whom the US is a key export market,
are caught between surging prices for oil and raw materials on
dollar-denominated markets, and the low dollar prices for their
manufactured goods set by US retailers like Wal-Mart. According
to figures published in Le Monde, in 2007 alone, dollar
prices for oil, wheat, lead, and gold have increased on world
markets by 64 percent, 63 percent, 118 percent, and 26 percent,
respectively. This has led to what some, notably in Australia,
have called the China resources boom.
The US governments demand that China let its currency
rise in value against the US dollar is an unsubtle invitation
for the Chinese bourgeoisie to take large capital losses (in home-currency
terms) on its gigantic dollar holdings.
Chinese officials have begun to argue for greater use of other
currencies in trade and finance, and in the Chinese governments
own investment portfolio. On November 7, the vice-chairman of
the Chinese parliament, Cheng Siwei, said: In terms of the
structure of our foreign exchange reserves, we should take advantage
of the appreciation of strong currencies to offset the depreciation
of weak currencies.... For example, in the current foreign reserves
structure, I mean the bonds we bought, the euro is appreciating
against the yuan while the US dollar is depreciating against the
yuan. So we should make a balance between the two.
Another official, Xu Jian of the Peoples Bank of China,
commented: The US dollars global currency status is
shaky and the creditworthiness of dollar assets is falling.
The interest of Chinese officials in other currencies, such
as the euro, comes as Chinese goods are increasingly penetrating
the European market. The EU reportedly overtook the US this year
as Chinas largest export market; already in 2006, the EU,
due to its larger export volume to China, was Chinas largest
trading partner (216.2 billion euros, versus 208.9 billion euros
for the US, according to EU figures).
Any significant shift in global demand for dollars toward demand
for euros would, however, pose a massive challenge to the US economy.
Due to its trade and current accounts deficits, the US requires
daily inflows of billions of dollars in capitalthat have
so far largely come from East Asiafor its financial system
to function. Any significant contraction of these inflows risks
triggering massive interest rate increases and a collapse in the
dollar, as demand for dollar-denominated debt dries up, and thus
a serious recession in the US and world economy.
In this context, it should be remarked that the US establishment
has long been aware of the euros strategic and military
implications. In 1997, five years before the launching of the
euro, Harvard economics professor and US National Bureau of Economic
Research CEO Martin Feldstein wrote in Foreign Affairs
that the formation of a single European currency risked weakening
Americas current global hegemony. He added that
this would undoubtedly complicate international military
relationships more generally.
The link between currency rivalry and military tensions is
not the product of Feldsteins imagination.
Such calculations clearly took place in Europe and Russia at
the time of the US invasion of Iraq, in 2003when the governments
of Germany, Russia, and France were trying to oppose US plans
for Middle East domination. At an October 2003 joint press conference
with then-German chancellor Gerhard Schröder in the Russian
city of Yekaterinburg, Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested
that Russia could price its oil sales to Europe in euros.
Irans more recent decision to sell its oil in euros and
yen also takes place in a definite military context: a US campaign
of political provocation resembling that which, in 2003, led to
the US invasion of Iraq.
Conclusion
In remarking that current tensions over Iran threatened to
provoke World War III, President Bush inadvertently acknowledged
the profound tensions tearing at the political and economic foundations
of world capitalism. Plans for a US war against Iran are baring
the rivalries between the different cliques of the world bourgeoisieAmerican,
European, Russian, Chinese, etc.and their preparation for
war against each other.
They are again affirming the basic contradiction identified
by the great Marxists of the early twentieth century: the clash
between the global character of mankinds productive forces
and the fetters imposed upon them by the capitalist nation-state
system.
The idea that the current Middle East conflicts would remain
localized in the case of US aggression against Iran is historical
and political blindness. Globalization on a capitalist basiswith
a ferocious competition inside the world bourgeoisie for the global
division of profits, and where the living standards of the working
classes of each region are pitted against each other in a race
to the bottomhas dangerously outlived itself. It threatens
not only a further eruption of US militarism in the Middle East
and the destabilization of world finance, but a horrific global
military conflagration.
See Also:
Iran: Why does Bush invoke the threat
of World War III?
Part 2: Eurasian geopolitics and US threats against Iran
[1 December 2007]
Iran: Why does Bush invoke
the threat of World War III?
Part 1: Iran's strategic position
[30 November 2007]
More warnings of a US war
on Iran
[29 October 2007]
US imposes unilateral sanctions
on Iran: One step closer to war
[26 October 2007]
Bush invokes threat of World
War III
[19 October 2007]
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