english.pravda.ru<https://english.pravda.ru/opinion/165383-venezuela_dollar/>
Venezuela Is Not About Drugs, Terrorism, or Democracy. It Is About the Dollar.
Nancy O'Brien Simpson
6–7 minutes
________________________________

Nancy J. Simpson

Photo: commons.wikimedia.org by Stefaniegbh, 
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/

Флаг Венесуэлы

Venezuela Is Not About Drugs, Terrorism, or Democracy. It Is About the Dollar.
Let us stop pretending.

The United States is not moving against Venezuela because of drugs.
Not because of terrorism.
Not because it suddenly discovered a passion for democracy.

This is about money.
More precisely, it is about the survival of the United States dollar as the 
world’s dominant currency.

That may sound dramatic, but it is simply true.

For fifty years, American power has rested on a quiet arrangement most citizens 
have never been taught. It is more important than aircraft carriers, more 
powerful than sanctions, and more enduring than any president.

It is called the petrodollar system.

In the nineteen seventies, after the collapse of the gold standard, the United 
States struck a strategic bargain with Saudi Arabia. Oil would be priced 
exclusively in United States dollars. In return, the United States would 
provide military protection.

That single agreement forced every country on Earth to hold dollars in order to 
buy energy. Artificial demand for the dollar was locked in. America could run 
deficits, print money, finance wars, and consume far beyond its productive 
capacity because the world had no alternative.

This arrangement has underwritten American dominance for half a century.

Now it is breaking.

Venezuela sits atop the largest proven oil reserves on the planet. More than 
Saudi Arabia. Roughly one fifth of the world’s known oil supply. That fact 
alone makes it strategically vital.

But oil itself is not the real threat.

The threat is how Venezuela chose to sell it.

Years ago, Caracas began moving away from the dollar. Oil sales were conducted 
in yuan, euros, and rubles. The government openly declared its intention to 
free itself from dollar dependence. It pursued deeper integration with China 
and Russia, explored payment systems outside United States control, and sought 
alignment with the BRICS bloc.

In other words, Venezuela did something unforgivable.

It challenged the dollar.

History tells us what follows.

When Saddam Hussein announced Iraq would sell oil in euros, Iraq was invaded. 
Weapons of mass destruction were never found, but Iraqi oil was swiftly 
returned to dollar pricing.

When Muammar Gaddafi proposed a gold backed African currency to facilitate oil 
trade, Libya was destroyed. Gaddafi was murdered. The project died with him. 
The country collapsed into chaos.

Different leaders. Different justifications. Same result.

Challenge the currency and lose the country.

Now consider Venezuela’s position. It holds far more oil than Iraq or Libya 
ever did. It has been actively trading outside the dollar system. It has been 
building alternatives to United States controlled financial infrastructure. It 
has aligned with the very nations driving global de dollarization.

This is not coincidence. It is pattern.

American officials are no longer hiding the logic. We are openly told that 
Venezuelan oil belongs to the United States because American companies helped 
develop the industry a century ago. By that reasoning, nearly every 
nationalized resource in history is theft.

The implication is clear. Sovereignty applies until it interferes with American 
economic dominance.

But here is the deeper problem Washington is facing.

The petrodollar system is already eroding.

Russia no longer sells energy exclusively in dollars. Iran has avoided the 
dollar for years. China has built its own global payment infrastructure. BRICS 
nations are developing settlement mechanisms that bypass United States 
financial control entirely. Even long standing United States partners are 
openly discussing alternatives.

The world is learning how to trade without asking permission.

Venezuela joining that ecosystem while holding enormous oil reserves would 
accelerate the shift dramatically. It would prove that de dollarization is not 
theoretical. It is workable. Durable. Profitable.

That is what cannot be allowed.

So the familiar script is rolled out again. Allegations. Sanctions. National 
security. Stability. The language is always vague, always moralized, always 
selective.

Meanwhile oil companies wait. Deals are drafted. And the message is sent not 
just to Venezuela but to the entire Global South.

Trade outside the dollar and you will pay the price.

But this time the threat may backfire.

Because the world is watching. And what it sees is not strength but fear. When 
a currency must be enforced through violence, it has already lost something 
essential.

You cannot bomb confidence into existence.

You cannot sanction your way back to trust.

And you cannot indefinitely compel a multipolar world to uphold a system 
designed for a unipolar one.

This is not about Venezuela’s president. It is not about ideology. It is not 
even really about oil.

It is about whether the United States can continue to live beyond its means by 
compelling the world to finance it or whether that era is ending.

If the dollar were truly unassailable, it would not need to be defended this 
way.

Venezuela is not the beginning of this story.

It feels much more like the end of a very old one.

History does not repeat, but it does echo. And the echo is growing louder.

The question is not whether the world hears it.

The question is whether it finally stops dancing to it.

-- 
http:www.antic.org
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