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Wag the Dog
How To Conceal Massive Economic Collapse
By Ellen Brown
“I’m in show business, why come to me?”
“War is show business, that’s why we’re here.”
– “Wag the Dog” (1997 film)
16/08/08 "ICH"
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Last
week, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had just announced record
losses, and so had most reporting corporations. Unemployment was
mounting, the foreclosure crisis was deepening, state budgets
were in shambles, and massive bailouts were everywhere.
Investors had every reason to expect the dollar and the stock
market to plummet, and gold and oil to shoot up. Strangely, the
Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 300 points, the dollar
strengthened, and gold and oil were crushed. What happened?
It
hardly took psychic powers to see that the Plunge Protection
Team had come to the rescue. Formally known as the President’s
Working Group on Financial Markets, the PPT was once concealed
and its very existence denied as if it were a matter of strict
national security. But the PPT has now come out of the closet.
What was once a legally questionable “manipulator” of markets
has become a sanctioned stabilizer and protector of markets. The
new tone was set in January 2008, when global markets took their
worst tumble since September 11, 2001. Senator Hillary Clinton
said in a statement reported by the State News Service:
“I think it’s imperative that the following step be taken.
The President should have already and should do so very
quickly, convene the President’s Working Group on Financial
Markets. That’s something that he can ask the Secretary of
the Treasury to do. . . . This has to be coordinated across
markets with the regulators here and obviously with
regulators and central banks around the world.” 1
The
mystery over what was going on with the dollar the first week in
August was solved by James Turk, founder of GoldMoney,
who wrote on August 7:
“[T]he banking problems in the United States continue to
mount, while the federal government’s deficit continues to
soar out of control. . . . So what happened to cause the
dollar to rally over the past three weeks? In a word,
intervention. Central banks have propped up the dollar, and
here’s the proof.
“When
central banks intervene in the currency markets, they
exchange their currency for dollars. Central banks then use
the dollars they acquire to buy US government debt
instruments so that they can earn interest on their money.
The debt instruments central banks acquire are held in
custody for them at the Federal Reserve, which reports this
amount weekly.
“On
July 16, 2008 . . . , the Federal Reserve reported holding
$2,349 billion of US government paper in custody for central
banks. In its report released today, this amount had grown
over the past three weeks to $2,401 billion, a 38.4%
annual rate of growth. . . . So central banks were
accumulating dollars over the past three weeks at a rate far
above what one would expect as a result of the US trade
deficit. The logical conclusion is that they were
intervening in currency markets. They were buying dollars
for the purpose of propping it up, to keep the dollar from
falling off the edge of the cliff and doing so ignited a
short covering rally, which is not too difficult to do given
the leverage employed in the markets these days by hedge
funds and others.”2
Just as
central banks manipulate currencies in concert, so gold can be
manipulated by massive selling of central bank reserves. Oil and
any other market can be manipulated as well. But markets can be
manipulated by only so much and for only so long without fixing
the underlying problem. There is more bad news coming down the
pike, news of such magnitude that no amount of ordinary
manipulation is liable to conceal it.
For one
thing, roughly $400 billion in ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages)
have or will reset between March and October of this year.
Assuming 3 to 6 months for strapped debtors to actually hit the
wall with their payments, a huge wave of defaults is about to
strike, continuing through March 2009 – just in time for the
next huge wave of resets, in option ARMs.3 Option
ARMs are loans with the option to pay even less than just the
interest on the loan monthly, increasing the loan balance until
the loan reaches a certain amount (typically 110% to 125% of the
original loan balance), when it resets. The $800 billion credit
line recently opened to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may be not
only tapped but tapped out, at taxpayer expense. The underlying
problem is little discussed but impossible to repair – a one
quadrillion dollar derivatives scheme that is now imploding.
Banks everywhere are facing massive writeoffs, putting the whole
banking system on the brink of collapse. Only public bailouts
will save it, but they could bankrupt the nation.
What to
do? War and threats of war have been used historically to
distract the population and deflect public scrutiny from
economic calamity. As the scheme was summed up in the trailer to
the 1997 movie “Wag the Dog” --
“There’s a crisis in the White House, and to save the
election, they’d have to fake a war.”
Perhaps
that explains the sudden breakout of war in the Eurasian country
of Georgia on August 8, just 3 months before the November
elections. August 8 was the day the Olympic Games began in
Beijing, a distraction that may have been timed to keep China
from intervening on Russia’s behalf. The mainstream media
version of events is that Russia, the bully on the block,
invaded its tiny neighbor Georgia; but not all commentators
agree. Mikhail Gorbachev, writing in The Washington Post
on August 12, observed:
“What
happened on the night of Aug. 7 is beyond comprehension. The
Georgian military attacked the South Ossetian capital of
Tskhinvali with multiple rocket launchers designed to devastate
large areas. Russia had to respond. To accuse it of aggression
against ‘small, defenseless Georgia’ is not just hypocritical
but shows a lack of humanity. . . . The Georgian leadership
could do this only with the perceived support and encouragement
of a much more powerful force.” 4
Bruce
Gagnon, coordinator of the Global Network against Weapons and
Nuclear Power, commented in OpEdNews on August 11:
“The
U.S. has long been involved in supporting ‘freedom
movements’ throughout this region that have been attempting
to replace Russian influence with U.S. corporate control.
The CIA, National Endowment for Democracy . . . , and
Freedom House (includes Zbigniew Brzezinski, former CIA
director James Woolsey, and Obama foreign policy adviser
Anthony Lake) have been key funders and supporters of
placing politicians in power throughout Central Asia that
would play ball with ‘our side’. . . . None of this is about
the good guys versus the bad guys. It is power bloc politics
. . . . Big money is at stake . . . . [B]oth parties
(Republican and Democrat) share a bi-partisan history and
agenda of advancing corporate interests in this part of the
world. Obama’s advisers, just like McCain’s (one of his top
advisers was recently a lobbyist for the current government
in Georgia) are thick in this stew.”5
Brzezinski, who is now Obama’s adviser, was Jimmy Carter’s
foreign policy adviser in the 1970s. He also served in the 1970s
as director of the Trilateral Commission, which he co-founded
with David Rockefeller Sr., considered by some to be the “master
spider” of the Wall Street banking network.6
Brzezinski, who wrote a book called The Grand Chessboard, later
boasted of drawing Russia into war with Afghanistan in 1979,
“giving to the Soviet Union its Vietnam War.”7 Is the
Georgia affair an attempted repeat of that coup? Mike Whitney, a
popular Internet commentator, observed on August 11:
“Washington’s bloody fingerprints are all over the invasion
of South Ossetia. Georgia President Mikhail Saakashvili
would never dream of launching a massive military attack
unless he got explicit orders from his bosses at 1600
Pennsylvania Ave. After all, Saakashvili owes his entire
political career to American power-brokers and US
intelligence agencies. If he disobeyed them, he’d be gone in
a fortnight. Besides an operation like this takes months of
planning and logistical support; especially if it’s
perfectly timed to coincide with the beginning of the
Olympic games. (another petty neocon touch) That means
Pentagon planners must have been working hand in hand with
Georgian generals for months in advance. Nothing was left to
chance.”8
Part of
that careful planning may have been the unprecedented propping
up of the dollar and bombing of gold and oil the week before the
curtain opened on the scene. Gold and oil had to be pushed down
hard to give them room to rise before anyone shouted
“hyperinflation!” As we watch the curtain rise on war in
Eurasia, it is well to remember that things are not always as
they seem. Markets are manipulated and wars are staged by Grand
Chessmen behind the scenes.
Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney
practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt,
her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the
Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this
private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the
people themselves and how we the people can get it back. Her
websites are webofdebt.com and ellenbrown.com.
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1 |
Remarks from
Hillary Clinton on the Global Economic Crisis,” CNN
(January 22, 2008) (video preserved on
allamericanpatriots.com). |
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2 |
James Turk,
“Mystery Solved,” GoldMoney.com (August 7, 2008). |
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3 |
Bill Murphy,
“Wipeout Nightmare,” LeMetropoleCafe.com (August
11, 2008); Ruth Simon, “FirstFed Grapples With
Payment-Option Mortgages,” Wall Street Journal
(August 6, 2008); Ruth Simon, “Mortgages Made in 2007 Go
Bad at Rapid Clip,” ibid. (August 7, 2008). |
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4 |
Mikhail
Gorbachev, “A Path to Peace in the Caucasus,”
Washington Post (August 12, 2008). |
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5 |
Bruce Gagnon,
“What Do We Know About Georgia-Russia Conflict?”,
OpEdNews (August 11, 2008). |
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6 |
Hans Schicht,
“Financial Spider Webbing,” Gold-eagle.com
(February 27, 2004). |
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7 |
“Soviet War in
Afghanistan,” Wikipedia. |
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8 |
Mike Whitney,
“Bush’s War in Georgia,” Global Research (August
11, 2008). |
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