The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: On day 9 of the war, much of the world is still wondering: "why Iraq, why now?" Bill Bonner considers a few of the media's more prevalent answers.
WHEN BUSH COMES TO SHOVE By Bill Bonner dailyreckoning.com
And freedom? Ahh, freedom... that's just some people talkin'
"Desperado" - the Eagles
The world's chattering classes pose themselves a two-part question: Why Iraq? Why now?
The Bush administration has given its answers. Saddam is a monster...he may have weapons of mass destruction...he has links to the Al Qaeda network...America's security is at stake...it is our duty to bring freedom to the Iraqi people...and so on.
These explanations were good enough for reporters, members of Congress, and village idiots...but the skeptics, cynics and kibitzers needed something more. All that Bush had said about Saddam might be true, but the same could have been said of him when America was supplying him with weapons of mass destruction a few years ago...and now could be said of many other regimes in the area. Cynics scratched their heads...and even laughed out loud at the "Liberty for Iraq" campaign theme. What's the 'real reason' for the war, the intellectuals continued to wonder? A French journalist, Francois de Bernard, wrote recently that he was so perplexed, he decided to study the transcripts of White House discussions for signs of mental illness!
Here at the Daily Reckoning, the question came up from time to time. We do not especially like intellectuals...and we have no faith in thinking, especially our own. But we stoop to it occasionally, after we've been drinking. We drink so much, however, that it is hard to find a single idea in our whole Daily Reckoning oeuvre that doesn't bear the stains of cheap Bordeaux.
We take it for granted that politicians usually lie and are often insane. Still, when they do extraordinary things - such as making war for no apparent reason - we look for reasons at least as absurd as the events they are meant to explain.
"It is plain bizarre," wrote Geoffrey Heard, from Australia, preparing to offer one. "Where does this desperation for war come from?"
"It's oil," is the reason most commonly given.
The insight quickly spread among the Greens and peaceniks, who didn't care much for oil in the first place. They were perfectly content to drive an SUV to an anti-war demonstration, but they never liked the people who produced oil, and didn't like the idea of other people using so much of it. "No blood for oil," became their slogan.
Blood for oil probably seemed like a fair bargain to many Americans, so long as it was someone else's blood. But the 'blood for oil' theme was too obvious to elicit much shock and awe at cocktail parties. And few intellectuals could imagine that the Bush administration would go to war in order to give their buddies in the oil industry a few slimy dollars of profit. 'Even Republicans could not be that craven,' they said to one another, probably underestimating them. But the theme had an even graver defect: it sounded too moralistic, as if someone were wagging a finger and threatening damnation.
Intellectuals had long since come to see the world in a different way: it is a mechanistic world, not a moralistic one, they say. Push lever A and you get result B. Morality has nothing to do with it; people get the results they chose, not the results they deserve. All they have to do is to push the right buttons and pull the right levers.
James Davidson, writing in this space a few weeks ago, accused us of being "Old School" here at the Daily Reckoning and derided the whole idea of morality in the marketplace. Why should investors ever be 'punished' for excessive gains, he wondered? Why couldn't they just earn more and more money, forever and ever, amen?
Paul Krugman, too, dismissed the notion that economics has a moral character. "Hangover theory," he called it...referring to the way a man who enjoys an excess of alcohol in the evening suffers an excess of regret the following morning. All that is needed is for government to make the right 'policy choices', he said, and the hangover would disappear.
The right policy choices had been described by Lord Keynes many years before. Analyzing the Great Depression, he came to the conclusion that it didn't really matter how much you drank the night before...you just had to find the right lever in the morning. When an economy fell into a slump, said he, the lever to pull on was the one marked "Government Spending". If the private sector was unwilling to spend, the public sector should pick up the slack; it was a simple as that. No moral lessons needed.
After mocking morality for the last 100 years, the intelligentsia could not look at the war from a moral perspective; instead, intellectuals had to pry open the hood and see how the machine worked.
Why was Bush pushing so hard on the "I" button? For the last 6 months, critics have been tracing the wires to try to figure out where they lead. Only recently, they have come upon the dollar. "There are many things driving President Bush and his administration to invade Iraq, unseat Saddam Hussein and take over the country," explains Heard. "But the biggest one is hidden and very, very simple. It is about the currency used to trade oil and consequently, who will dominate the world economically, in the foreseeable future - the USA or the European Union. "Iraq is a European Union beachhead in that confrontation. America had a monopoly on the oil trade, with the U.S. dollar being the fiat currency, but Iraq broke ranks in 1999, started to trade oil in the EU's euros, and profited. If America invades Iraq and takes over, it will hurl the EU and its euro back into the sea and make America's position as the dominant economic power in the world all but impregnable."
"In 1999, Iraq, with the world's second-largest oil reserves, switched to trading its oil in euros. American analysts fell about laughing; Iraq had just made a mistake that was going to beggar the nation. But two years on, alarm bells were sounding; the euro was rising against the dollar, and Iraq had given itself a huge economic free kick by switching. "Iran started thinking about switching too; Venezuela, the 4th largest oil producer, began looking at it and has been cutting out the dollar by bartering oil with several nations including America's bête noir, Cuba. Russia is seeking to ramp up oil production with Europe (trading in euros), an obvious market. "The greenback's grip on oil trading, and consequently on world trade in general, was under serious threat. If America did not stamp on this immediately, this economic brushfire could rapidly be fanned into a wildfire capable of consuming the U.S.'s economy and its dominance of world trade."
Mr. Heard has a point. The U.S., its dollar, its consumers, its government and its central bank have an enormous advantage. But it is an advantage like an unlimited bar tab; it can get a man into trouble.
The U.S. issues dollars to pay for the things it wants. Many of the dollars are then used to buy oil. As long as oil accounts are settled in dollars, there will be a demand for them. But the demand is not infinite. More dollars are needed only insofar as the world's use of oil increases...not necessarily as America's need for foreign credit increases.
The wiring of the world financial system is more complicated than Mr. Heard thinks. The U.S. may seize the oil fields. It may reinstall the dollar as the designated currency. But it cannot make its financial situation "impregnable". It can control the value of its currency, or its quantity, but not both. If it increases the supply of dollars, it risks setting off a panic out of dollars - whether oil is priced in dollars or not.
The U.S. may control Iraq's oil fields, but it cannot control oil's price...nor its reciprocal, the price of the dollar. In the end, these will be determined not just by how the oil market is wired, but also by how human beings are wired. When they grow fearful of the dollar...not even the 3rd Infantry will be able to stop them from dumping it.
Then, there will be hell to pay...no matter what lever authorities choose to yank.
Bill Bonner, writing from a little outpost of the Old School, in a small, old corner of an old city in old Europe... |