The World Is Changing, But Is Washington Finally Noticing?
by Ted
Snider | Apr 26, 2023
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/the-world-is-changing-but-is-washington-finally-noticing/
Recent statements by two Biden administration
officials hint that the United States is finally noticing that the world around
them is changing.
On April 11, CIA Director William Burns spoke at Rice
University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. In a somewhat stunning
statement that has, perhaps, not been so clearly and publicly articulated
before, Burns said that
we are in one of “those times of transition that come along a couple of times a
century. Today the United States still has a better hand to play than any of
our rivals, but it is no longer the only big kid on the geopolitical bloc. And
our position at the head of the table isn’t guaranteed.”
Burns’ classifying the transition that is now taking
place as a “transition that come along a couple of times a century” echoes
Chinese President Xi Jinping’s comment to
Russian President Vladimir Putin last month that, “Together, we should push
forward these changes that have not happened for 100 years” and recognizes the
significance of the tectonic geopolitical shift that is occurring. The unipolar
world is extinct and has been replaced by an evolving multipolar world in which
the United States “is no longer the only big kid on the geopolitical bloc.”
China’s diplomatic role in brokering an agreement between Saudi Arabia and Iran
demonstrated America’s “position at the head of the table isn’t guaranteed.”
The ever strengthening partnership between Russia and
China has tilted the weight of the world toward a multipolar one. In March, Xi
visited Putin in Moscow where they not only “reaffirm[ed]
the special nature of the Russia-China partnership,” but “signed a statement on
deepening the strategic partnership and bilateral ties which are entering a new era.”
But the Sino-Russian relationship in the new
multipolar world isn’t just bilateral. Countries are lining up to join Chinese
and Russian-led multipolar organizations like BRICS and the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization. From the call for multipolarity among the many African nations attending
the Russia-Africa in a Multipolar World conference in Moscow in March, to Saudi
Arabia’s assertion that
“We do not believe in polarization or selecting between one partner and
another,” to India’s continued diplomatic and economic cooperation with Russia
and China, to Brazil’s promise to
uphold and strengthen multilateralism, to France’s surprising call for
Europe to become a “third pole,” countries around the world are leaving the
U.S.-led unipolar world for neutrality in a multipolar world.
One of the mechanisms for multipolarity is
emancipation from the monopoly of the U.S. dollar. Most international trade is
conducted in dollars, and most foreign exchange reserves are held in dollars.
As the United States has recently demonstrated in Cuba, Venezuela, Iran, and
Russia, the position of the dollar allows it to be very powerfully and quickly
weaponized.
Sanctions have not only accelerated the evolution of
the multipolar world by creating a community of sanctioned countries that turn
to each other, forming a second pole, but they have also weakened the U.S.-led
unipolar world by weakening willingness to depend on the dollar.
In the second stunning statement by a U.S. official,
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on
April 16, “There is a risk when we use financial sanctions that are linked to
the role of the dollar that over time it could undermine the hegemony of the
dollar.” She explained, “Of course, it does create a desire on the part of
China, of Russia, of Iran to find an alternative.”
And find an alternative they have. Yellen’s statement
suggests that the United States is beginning to recognize that escaping the
monopoly of the U.S. dollar is gaining momentum as a mechanism for ending, not
only the “hegemony of the dollar,” but of the United States itself.
Recent demonstrations of the American ability to cut
off countries that challenge it has awoken opposition. Several countries and
regions, including Russia, China, India, Iran, Brazil, Saudi Arabia, France,
Latin America, BRICS, and the Eurasian Economic Union, have all expressed
interest in and even made moves towards partially escaping the U.S. dollar.
Russia and China are now conducting 65%
of their trade in their own currencies. China and Brazil are now conducting bilateral
trade in their own currencies, as are China and Pakistan. Iran and Russia are
now settling trade in rials and rubles instead
of dollars and recently announced that
they have circumvented the U.S. financial system by linking their banking
systems as an alternative to SWIFT for trading with each other. Saudi Arabia
has said that
it sees “no issues” in trading oil in currencies other than the U.S. dollar.
The Eurasian Economic Union has agreed on
“a phased transition” from settling trade in “foreign currency” to “settlements
in rubles.” Robert Rabil,
Professor of political science at Florida Atlantic University, says that the
United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and Israel have all made some movement away from
the U.S. dollar.
Brazil has raised the idea of a Latin American currency.
And Brazilian President Lula da Silva recently asked,
“Why should every country have to be tied to the dollar for trade? Who decided
the dollar would be the [world’s] currency?” “Why,” he suggested, “can’t a bank
like the BRICS bank have a currency to finance trade between…BRICS
countries?” BRICS and
the SCO are both considering abandoning the dollar in favor of trade in the
currencies of member states.
While American activity suggests a foreign policy that
drives on, unaware of the new terrain its entered, the recent statements by
Burns and Yellen suggest that at least some in the Biden administration are
beginning to notice that the world is changing. U.S. hegemony, its “position at
the head of the table,” is no longer “guaranteed.”
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