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An Alchemist Explains to Joe Sixpack: ‘COVID-19 Alters America’s Hidden ‘War’ 
Forever’


Alastair Crooke

15-19 minutes

  _____  

A perception ‘gap’, so wide, you could sail a Cruise Liner through it. On the 
one hand, we have the looming spectre of recession; a major loss of jobs, and 
of earnings cratered (some 80% of the global workforce has seen their 
workplaces closed, or partly closed, as a result of the virus crisis), and on 
the other hand, the shocking non-sequitur of the U.S. Fed reporting 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-consumers-slide-depression-they-have-never-been-more-bullish-stocks>
  that, despite the crisis, ‘the average consumer expectation for higher 
stock-market prices one year hence has now surged to 47.7%, the highest on 
record’.

ZeroHedge wryly comments 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-consumers-slide-depression-they-have-never-been-more-bullish-stocks>
 , “Right … because with his job gone, his $400 dollars of emergency savings 
just spent on a roll of toilet paper, his bank preparing to foreclose on his 
home, all while a deadly virus lurks in every corner, all Joe Sixpack can think 
of – is how to get his ‘money on the sidelines’ into the stock market – since 
it is about to soar to all-time highs. And so, thanks to the Fed’s now 
grotesque interventions in all capital markets … as the economy slides into a 
depression, it is only ‘logical’ – we use the term loosely – that expectations 
of higher stock prices have never been higher.”

A freak result, devoid of serious consideration? No. Actually, the paradox 
rather neatly ties together what is implicit, from that which has been explicit 
in U.S. policy, both domestically, and in terms of its foreign policy.

In foreign policy – in the post-Covid era – we see tensions with China 
ratchetting higher. The U.S. already is engaged in a full-spectrum info-war to 
blame China for the virus (and to divert criticism from the U.S.’ lack of 
preparedness). China, recalling the earlier ‘Century of Humiliation’ visited on 
it by western states, and sensing some inherent racism in the taunts, 
inevitably is responding unusually assertively.

In a recent episode of soul-searching by an Obama National Security adviser, 
Ben Rhodes has written 
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/04/its-not-september-12-anymore/609502/?utm_campaign=wp_todays_worldview&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_todayworld>
  of GW Bush’s speech (in wake of 9/11): “Our War on Terror begins with 
al-Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist 
group of global reach has been found, stopped, and defeated”. He further 
defined the nature of the conflict by saying, “Americans are asking, ‘Why do 
they hate U.S.?’ They hate what we see right here in this chamber – a 
democratically elected government”. To have this unfathomable event framed in a 
way that fitted neatly into the American narrative that I’d grown up with in 
the 1980s and ’90s, was reassuring, Rhodes admits 
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/04/its-not-september-12-anymore/609502/?utm_campaign=wp_todays_worldview&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_todayworld>
 .

He later (in the article), says that he had been naïve, and swept along by his 
emotions, at seeing New York’s Twin Towers cascade down into dust – and was 
roused by Bush’s fiery rhetoric. Mr Sixpack probably feels similarly: He too, 
had been told that America’s economy was strong and booming, until the virus 
flew into it, despatching America’s economy into free fall. Shocked and angry, 
Joe probably hopes that America will ‘Give it to them’ (the Chinese that is, 
“they”, whom the narrative suggests were responsible for it).

That is the explicit – in conjunction with Trump’s Trade War, triggered 
ostensibly by China’s ‘hijacking’ of America’s commercial assets.

The ‘unsaid’ in this narrative is an old story of warfare. Destroy your enemy’s 
supply-lines to weaken him. In Britain in 1891, a small circle of the inner 
élite was formed, in secret 
<https://www.amazon.com/Hidden-History-Secret-Origins-First/dp/1780576307> , 
around Cecil Rhodes, the South African diamond millionaire, and Lord 
Rothschild. Its members aimed to renew the bond between Britain and the U.S., 
and they believed that ruling-class men of Anglo-Saxon descent, rightly sat at 
the top of a hierarchy built on predominance in trade, industry, banking and 
the exploitation of other lands (much as America’s élites do today).

This élite harbored a deep-rooted fear however, that unless they acted 
decisively, British power and influence across the world would be eroded, and 
replaced by that of a burgeoning Germany. In the years immediately after the 
Boer War, the decision was reached: The danger had to be addressed. And ‘war’ 
with Germany was planned 
<https://www.amazon.com/Hidden-History-Secret-Origins-First/dp/1780576307> : 
initially as a severing of its supply-lines; a propaganda ‘war’ casting Germans 
as child-eaters, and through diplomatic containment.

Narratives were harnessed to this objective, and the historian, Paul Vincent, 
tellingly recreates 
<https://mises.org/library/blockade-and-attempted-starvation-germany>  the 
atmosphere of jubilation that surrounded the outbreak of the war that was truly 
the fateful watershed of the twentieth century. H.G. Wells, for instance, 
gushed: “I find myself enthusiastic for this war against Prussian militarism … 
Every sword that is drawn against Germany is a sword drawn for peace.” Wells 
later coined the mendacious slogan “the war to end war”.

Britain, from the onset of war in 1914, imposed a tight naval blockade on 
Germany. By preventing food from being imported into the country, the British 
brought starvation and malnutrition to large masses of the German people. 
German submarine warfare was a desperate response to the British blockade—a 
blockade so effective that it threatened to force the Germans out of the war.

Fast-forward to today: The uprooting, and ‘re-patriating’ of China’s 
supply-lines back to America (given new fuel now, from the discovery that so 
many of America’s basic medical needs are ‘made in China’); seizing the 
commanding heights of technology; building out, militarily, into Space; 
mobilizing Europe against China; sanctioning China’s external sources of 
energy, and casting China as the virus-demon – all form today’s toolbox for 
what threatens the Anglo-élite.

Perhaps the resident ‘Alchemist’ at ZeroHedge <https://www.zerohedge.com/> , 
will take Joe Sixpack aside, and quietly say to him: “Look, Joe, Covid-19 is 
merely a virus – an invisible organism. You can’t see it. You cannot ‘make war’ 
on it. When the British began imagining Germans as demonic monsters to be 
destroyed, they ended by not only destroying European culture, but also any 
commitment to the Ancient World’s notion of Virtù or Homeric heroic conduct.

In their place, successive generations embraced relativism, nihilism, brooding 
pessimism and resentment. And from the massive, warring, governments’ 
intrusions into every facet of civil society, arose the German 
Kriegssozialismus that was to become 
<https://mises.org/library/blockade-and-attempted-starvation-germany>  the 
model for the Bolsheviks. Again, as Vincent points out, “the British achieved 
control over their economy, unequalled by any of the other belligerent states: 
But everywhere state seizure of social power, was accompanied and fostered by 
propaganda lies, unparalleled in history, to that time”.

But why (asks Joe) did you smile so enigmatically when I said that I might buy 
stock (shares) on credit provided by my broker, to try to recoup my loss of 
earnings, as a result of the Coronavirus?

“Well”, says the Alchemist, “I was thinking of the ‘hidden ‘war’, and how a 
virus ‘out of nowhere’ has changed its course, for good”.

“What do you mean?”, queries Joe.

“You recall how you said that the U.S. economy was fundamentally the strongest 
in the world? Well that’s not quite true. Sometime ago, U.S. growth began to 
falter, and the Authorities opted for a debt-driven, consumer-led economy. 
Money was printed (as credit), and – normally – a lot of new money or debt in 
circulation, would have created inflation (such as we had during the Reagan 
Administration).

“How we managed this difficulty (apart from regularly re-jigging the price 
index), was by the so-called ‘China Trade’. China was then in the midst of its 
Industrial Revolution: they sent cheap products to Walmart. They effectively 
subsidised the middle classes, by giving U.S. a standard of living – access to 
cheap consumer-goods – which otherwise, we could not have afforded. And better 
still, they recirculated the monetary proceeds back to Wall Street, through 
buying U.S. Treasury bonds.

“The point here, was that in so doing (buying our debt), the Chinese allowed 
U.S. to shrink our created, new-money ‘footprint’, by exporting U.S. dollar 
debt out of harm’s way – to Emerging Markets. We have lent out $13 trillion in 
this way, thus repressing the domestic money footprint.

“These little ‘tricks’ were necessary to avoid inflation. But the inflation 
threat was mitigated also, in another way. All this new money was used to 
‘financialise’ and leverage ‘everything’, from healthcare to education. They 
blew ‘bubbles’.

“This gave U.S. a simulacrum of ‘growth’ – but money-printing did not make the 
dollars available to you, I’m afraid, Joe. They got stuck in the financial 
system and were hoarded. You may have noticed that times were getting less 
rosy. But that was also a result of the U.S. business model 
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/americas/2020-03-30/us-economy-uniquely-vulnerable-coronavirus>
 , which has always prioritised capital formation and allowed labour costs to 
take the strain, or be eased-down by off-shoring labour costs to overseas.

“Ah, but what of the ‘hidden war’ that you spoke about. How does that fit in?”, 
asks Joe.

“You recall what I said earlier about Britain fearing that it could not stay at 
the pinnacle of international power forever? And seeing Germany somehow coming 
together, and building-out towards the East, in order in order to rival 
Britain? Well, China some years ago, stopped re-circulating the proceeds from 
the China Trade back to Wall Street, and instead started building-out towards 
Central Asia. It began spending the proceeds of the ‘China Trade’ building the 
Belt and Road, instead. As Germany had threatened to rival Britain, China was 
on a path to rival America.

“This posed a problem for the U.S.: firstly, how now to finance that China 
Trade; and secondly – not least – how to let the middle classes’ down gently, 
from the loss of their ‘China Trade’ ‘subsidy’, and avoid a ‘revolt’ inside the 
U.S. The blowing of the housing ‘bubble’ was intended – at least partly – as 
the offset.

“Equally problematic for U.S. was that the Chinese-Russian Eurasian project, 
was intended to channel trade – in a hugely important sphere, including energy 
and raw materials – not via our channel – the dollar – but rather, away from 
it. The dollar has been ‘squeezed’ by the de-dollarisation crowd since at least 
2007.

“Hence all the ‘tricks’ in the toolbox that I outlined earlier. But it got 
worse: We have tried to keep all the oil sales in the world going through the 
dollar (sanctioning non-compliant producers, creating instability of supply 
etc.), but scattergun of sanctions just brought everybody into our 
jurisdiction, and made their financial systems subject to arbitrary U.S. 
Treasury threat. The world doesn’t want to do that anymore. The revolt grew.

“This, in essence, was the ‘hidden war’. And it was not going so well: The U.S. 
Treasury – simply – was running out of further bubbles to blow. Finally, it had 
resorted to blowing the ‘everything bubble’ to maintain the appearance of a 
strong economy; but as this structure became ever bigger, more leveraged, more 
complex and thus opaque – so it became less stable. The Coronavirus ‘pin’ 
popped the bubble – forcing Washington to deploy unlimited money-printing, and 
to bailout simply, ‘everything’ (which is the inevitable ‘logical’ response to 
an ‘everything bubble’, I would imagine)”, said the Alchemist.

“Then, what happens now” blurts out Joe, alarmed: “Will it end in war, like in 
the 19th Century?”

“Possibly, but probably, not”, responds the Alchemist calmly. “China is too 
powerful, but its economy inevitably will have been weakened too. More likely, 
America will continue the struggle against China (and Russia) through proxies, 
such as in Venezuela, or in the Middle East. (Iran though is a special case, on 
account of Israel).”

“At the end of WW1, European economies had been partly shut down by the war – 
and there were huge dollar debts owing to the U.S. Today, western economies are 
in partial lockdown due to Covid-19. And national debts today are similarly, 
more or less, at levels associated with (real) wartimes. And there is the $13 
trillion – owed by emerging markets, and for which repayment in full, now must 
be viewed as problematic.

“After WWI, there was no debt forgiveness (no debt jubilee), just a 
pass-the-parcel practiced by the European states, as they tried to off-load 
their debts onto others. To find an exit, some hoped that austerity could fix 
the problem. But others did resort to ‘helicopter money’ (much as the U.S. is 
so doing, in its response to the Covid-19 lockdown). The gold-backed German 
Reichsmark became the unbacked Papermark 
<https://mises.org/library/90-years-ago-end-german-hyperinflation> . Initially, 
the Reich financed its war outlays, in large part, through issuing debt. But 
From May 1923, the quantity of Papermark started spinning out of control. 
Wholesale prices skyrocketed. By 1918, you could have bought 500 billion eggs 
for the same money you would have to spend, five years later, for just one egg. 
The Papermark was scrap value.

“With the collapse of the currency, unemployment was on the rise. 
Hyperinflation had impoverished the great majority of the German population, 
especially the middle class. People suffered from food shortages and cold. And 
political extremism was on the rise. This is a real risk, since all the earlier 
Treasury gigs to suppress inflation are no longer available.

“So what might Washington do – especially about the $13 trillion debt owed by 
EMs?”, pleaded Joe. “Why don’t they reform the system?”

“We don’t know what they will do”, sighed the Alchemist, “but the signals 
suggest that the Central Bankers are toying with a new global, reserve digital 
crypto-currency – against which EMs (and the U.S.) might devalue their 
currencies. (The former governor of the Bank of England has hinted at something 
like this). It might never happen. The type of ‘crypto’ the Central Bankers 
have in mind is one giving the authorities complete control: no real money, 
just a credit at the central bank with ATMs spitting out only what the central 
banks determine. And no, there will be no real reform – only ‘mumbleswerve’. 
But that – dirty money, lots and lots of it – is another story. Transparency is 
not an option.

“So, you would advise me not to buy stocks?”, asks Joe.

“No, I wouldn’t Joe. It seems that Trump now wants to bail out the American 
Middle Class in a different way. I know you, like many others, like to check 
out daily their 401K (stocks held as a future pension provision). And if it’s 
up, they are happy; if not they are gloomy. So Trump is trying to blast-up 
markets, with a wall of freshly printed money – and bailouts unlimited.

“The President has taken full control of the (nuclear) button that controls the 
global supply of money, in dollars. He has control of the Treasury which has 
completed its take-over 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/fed-and-treasury-have-now-merged>  and 
merger with the Fed. How things work is that Congress authorises $450 billion 
in a CARES bailout. The Treasury gives it to the Fed as its stake – and then 
instructs the Fed to multiply that stake, by a factor of ten (through printing 
fresh money). The $450 billion becomes $4.5 trillion and is handed over 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/feds-cure-risks-being-worse-disease-james-bianco>
  to a friendly Hedge Fund – Blackrock – to distribute. And the details of the 
distribution are all tied up in confidentiality clauses and opacity. Trump 
becomes a secular Croesus: he can ‘print’ as much as he wishes. Nothing to stop 
him. Will be able to contain himself?

Joe sighs.

“So, the question then, Joe, is – is it really feasible for the market to soar 
when maybe half the economy is semi-furloughed, and inherentvalue is plunging?

“As I mentioned earlier, money ‘printing’ does not always make dollars 
available. Liquidity is being provided to the U.S. banks: yes, but the problem 
is not so much liquidity; but one of potential default – especially on the $13 
trillion owed overseas. So there is a massive scramble by those overseas 
debtors for dollars, with which to pay interest, and capital repayments, as 
they become due – and that means the dollar will soar (for now). It is the 
dollar strength that brings to world to its nadir (just like the 1930s). It is 
the dollar system that is the really big problem. This virus will either prick 
the dollar bubble and collapse it in an inflationary spiral downwards – or, the 
CBs will be forced to find some other solution (though God knows what!)

Joe sighs again.

“I’m afraid Joe, that I may not have been much help to you – sorry”.

 

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