The World Can
Halt Bush’s Crimes By Dumping the Dollar
By Paul Craig Roberts
What would be the
consequences of a US or Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear
energy sites?
0212/07 "ICH"
-- -- At the 2006 Perdana
Global Peace Forum, Australian medical scientist
Dr. Helen
Caldicott provided an authoritative analysis:
[VIDEO]
of the devastating impact on human life that would
result from the radiation release from such an attack.
Dr. Caldicott described the
catastrophic deaths that would result from a
conventional attack on nuclear facilities and the
long-term increase in cancer deaths from the radiation
release.
Should the attack be made
with nuclear weapons--as some of Bush’s criminally
insane neoconservative advisers advocate--the
populations of many countries would suffer for
generations from radioactive particles in air, water,
and food chains. Deaths would number in the many
millions.
Such an attack justified in
the name of “American security” and “American hegemony”
would constitute the rawest form of evil the world has
ever seen, far surpassing in evil the atrocities of the
Nazi and Communist regimes.
Dr. Caldicott detailed the
horrible long-term consequences for the Iraqi population
from the US military’s current use of depleted uranium
in explosive ammunition used in Iraq. Caldicott
explained that “depleted” does not mean depleted of
radiation. She explained that each time such ammunition
is used, radioactive particles are released in the air
and are absorbed into people’s lungs. We are yet to see
the horrific civilian casualty rate of the American
invasion--or the true casualty rate among US troops.
Dr. Caldicott expressed
bewilderment why the rest of the world does not stand up
to the US and force a halt to its crimes against
humanity.
One man heard her--Vladimir
Putin, President of Russia.
On February 10 at the 43rd
Munich Security Conference, President Putin told the
world’s assembled political leaders that the US was
trying to establish a “uni-polar world,” which he
defined as “one single center of power, one single
center of force and one single master.”
This goal, Putin said, was
a “formula for disaster.”
“The United States,” Putin
said, truthfully, “has overstepped its borders in all
spheres” and “has imposed itself on other states.”
The Russian leader
declared: “We see no kind of restraint--a hyper-inflated
use of force.”
To avoid catastrophe, Putin
said a reconsideration of the entire existing
architecture of global security was necessary.
Putin’s words of truth fell
on many deaf ears. US Senator John McCain, America’s
most idiotic and dangerous “leader” after Bush and
Cheney, equated Putin’s legitimate criticism of the US
with “confrontation.”
America’s new puppets--the
states of central and Eastern Europe and the secretary
general of NATO, no longer a treaty for the defense of
Europe but a military force enlisted in America’s quest
for empire--lined up with McCain’s argument that Russia
was in fundamental conflict “with the core values of
Euro-Atlantic democracies.”
Even the BBC’s defense and
security correspondent, Rob Watson, jumped on the
American propaganda bandwagon, tagging Putin’s speech a
revival of the cold war.
No delegate at the security
conference stood up to state the obvious fact that it is
not Russia that is invading countries under pretexts as
false as Hitler’s and setting up weapons systems on
foreign soil in order to achieve military hegemony.
The reception given to
Putin’s words made it clear to Russia, China, and every
country not bribed, threatened or purchased into
participation in America’s drive for world hegemony that
the US has no interest whatsoever in peace. Intelligent
people realize that American claims to be a moral and
democratic force are mere pretense behind which hides a
policy of military aggression.
The US, Putin said, has
gone “from one conflict to another without achieving a
fully-fledged solution to any of them.”
Putin has repeatedly
stressed Russia’s peaceful intentions and desire to
focus on its economy and to avoid a new arms race. In
his speech on the 60th anniversary of the victory over
Nazi Germany, Putin said: “I am convinced that there is
no alternative to our friendship and our fraternity.
With our closest neighbors and all countries of the
world, Russia is prepared to build a kind of
relationship which is not only based on lessons of the
past but is also directed into a shared future.”
In his 2006 state of the
nation speech, Putin noted that America’s military
budget is 25 times larger than Russia’s. He compared
the Bush Regime to a wolf who eats whom he wants without
listening. Putin is being demonized by US
propagandists, because he insists upon Russia being a
politically and economically independent state.
The Bush Regime has taken
the US outside the boundaries of international law and
is acting unilaterally, falsely declaring American
military aggression to be “defensive” and in the
interests of peace. Much of the world realizes the
hypocrisy and danger in the Bush Regime’s justification
of the unbridled use of US military power, but no
countries except other nuclear powers can challenge
American aggression, and then only at the risk of all
life on earth.
The solution is nonmilitary
challenge.
The Bush Regime’s ability
to wage war is dependent upon foreign financing. The
Regime’s wars are financed with red ink, which means the
hundreds of billions of dollars must be borrowed. As
American consumers are spending more than they earn on
consumption, the money cannot be borrowed from
Americans.
The US is totally dependent
upon foreigners to finance its budget and trade
deficits. By financing these deficits, foreign
governments are complicit in the Bush Regime’s military
aggressions and war crimes. The Bush Regime’s two
largest lenders are China and Japan. It is ironic that
Japan, the only nation to experience nuclear attack by
the US, is banker to the Bush Regime as it prepares a
possible nuclear attack on Iran.
If the rest of the world
would simply stop purchasing US Treasuries, and instead
dump their surplus dollars into the foreign exchange
market, the Bush Regime would be overwhelmed with
economic crisis and unable to wage war. The arrogant
hubris associated with the “sole superpower” myth would
burst like the bubble it is.
The collapse of the dollar
would also end the US government’s ability to subvert
other countries by purchasing their leaders to do
America’s will.
The demise of the US dollar
is only a question of time. It would save the world
from war and devastation if the dollar is brought to its
demise before the Bush Regime launches its planned
attack on Iran.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate
Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and
Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor
of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.