Michael Hudson: Russia and China CRUSH NATO’s Plan as Ukraine FALLS Apart

Yves here. This Michael Hudson talk with Nima of Dialogue Works seems a fitting dimensioning of the size of the hole NATO has gotten itself in with Project Ukraine as the July NATO summit starts.

Some may regard Hudson’s description of US foreign policy as highly reliant on coercion as an exaggeration. However, Jeffrey Sachs, who has had a front row seat on many US policy decisions, has been saying precisely the same thing and retired Lieutenant Colonel Larry Wilkerson has made similar observations.

Originally published at Dialogue Works

NIMA: Michael, let’s start with Russian economy right now. The World Bank reported that in 2023, Russia’s economic growth was 3.6. They have been predicting for this year, for 2024, they were talking about 1.3. Right now, they’re talking about 2.9. And it’s much more than double than the value that they have been predicting before. Is this war in Ukraine helping the Russian economy, in your opinion?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, President Biden is responsible for most of the Russian growth. I think we’ve talked about that before. When you impose sanctions on a country, a country has two choices. Either it can let itself fall apart, or it can produce for itself what it used to import. So, the sanctions have led Russia, first of all, to become self-sufficient in food, especially vegetables. They don’t have to import food from the Baltics anymore. They’ve become self-sufficient in many consumer goods, industrial goods.

The result of the sanctions imposed by Biden and followed by Europe have had the effect that Biden wanted. They have cut Europe off from Russia. They’ve separated Europe and lost the entire basis of the last 30 years’ prosperity in Western Europe. So, the prosperity that Europe no longer has is now enjoyed by Russia.

Now, we know that Biden and advisors didn’t do this intentionally. It’s simply the result of their nastiness, of thinking that if you can hurt another country enough, that will force it to do what you want it to do. That’s the American policy, and it’s the only policy that America has. It doesn’t have an economic argument for why sanctions will help Russia and hurt Europe and hurt the United States. It only has this atavistic hostility that has been Biden’s personality and character ever since he joined Congress. He’s picked nasty people around him, just like he’s picked nasty dogs around him that bite his security staff. So, that’s the result of having this negative approach to the world. It backfires.

If you’re really nasty, you don’t realize that it’s backfired. You just try to be nastier. That’s, of course, what causes the real danger today in Ukraine and Palestine and the Near East, the danger that the West is going to keep getting nastier and nastier and escalating. The result, of course, has been to drive Russia together, China together, and take the leadership in creating the whole BRICS as an alternative world system.

So, Russia’s GDP has been the beneficiary of this, but most of all, the structure of Russia, the ideology and the realization that the West has nothing to offer Russia, China, or the other countries except neoliberalism.

NIMA: Europe is just having a lot of problems considering their economy. How can they increase their defense budget in order to feed this military-industrial complex in the United States?

MICHAEL HUDSON: They can do just what the International Monetary Fund tells countries to do in a case like this. Number one, they can cut back social spending and reduce living standards. Number two, they can begin selling off their infrastructure, their industry, their agriculture to American buyers. That’s the only way that they can cope for it. There’s no other way.

And, of course, that’s what the centrist parties, the Social Democrats and the labor parties, want to do. That’s why every European leader has lost in the last elections. The voters have just said, no, there must be an alternative to this. Unfortunately, the alternative is more neoliberalism. So, you get rid of one neoliberal party and you get another neoliberal party in. I don’t see much hope for Europe.

NIMA: How do you see the changes that are happening far right, far left, center? Is it changing? The definition of these terms are changing in Europe, in your opinion?

MICHAEL HUDSON: The rhetoric is changing. And there has been a change. The socialist parties, when they moved to the right wing of the spectrum, became internationalist. A lot of this was the result of World War II, and it’s been happening for 75 years. Many of the liberals thought that what caused World War II was nationalism. What’s the alternative to nationalism? Internationalism. So, they all thought that joining Europe together would end European war. And if you could have an international world economy, that would end war.

What they didn’t realize is that the international world economy has become unipolar, dominated by the United States, and the United States is nationalist. So, what you have is an internationalist economy that is dominated by the United States and its own national interests against other countries. And its national interests believe that it can only consolidate its power by preventing any other country from acting independently of the United States. And even if they don’t act actively against American trade policy or financial policy, the very potential of them for being independent is looked at as a deadly risk for them. And so, the United States is engaged in regime change. It’s put 800 military bases across the world to prevent all this.

Well, the effect of all this has been to drive the rest of the world together. And it looks like it’s creating a new international order by the BRICS, by the 85% of the world population. And what you’re seeing now is in response to the United States’ drive to control the world and its own interests. It’s driven Russia, China, and Iran together, first of all, by creating the military alliance, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and then by expanding into the BRICS.

And now, you’re seeing already every month, far-reaching changes. You’ve just seen President Putin go to Vietnam and North Korea, trying to consolidate all of Eurasia into an independent entity, an independent international group, along with the Global South, that will create basically a whole set of new institutions to what the US economic order was.

And you have the speeches of President Putin, Lavrov, and other Russian officials saying the United Nations is now, unfortunately, being blocked and controlled by the United States. We need a new United Nations. Putin said that they’re still going to be the old United Nations. We can leave that there to lumber along. But we’re going to need a new group representing the nations that are free of United States veto power in them. They’re going to need a new international monetary fund with an idea of economic stability and financial stability that does not involve austerity planning and anti-labor policies, and that does not believe that the way to maximize economic growth is to reduce living standards, reduce wages, and squeeze more out of labor, but to increase living standards to make labor more productive.

That’s how Britain, the United States, Germany, and France, all the other countries developed. And now, you’re having the former colonial areas of the world reinvent the wheel by doing essentially what the Western economies did. And to do that, they have to be free of the Western economies’ political domination, military domination, and above all, the financial legacy of international debt.

NIMA: Hillary Clinton recently just was talking about that Ukrainians have to go on an offensive in order to help Biden. What are the roots of this kind of mindset? The war in Ukraine, is that important for the Democratic Party, or they’re just pretending to be that way?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Politics in America is a psychodrama, and it’s very hard to explain to reasonable people how a country like the United States can be unreasonable. But the Biden administration and the Democrats generally, and Congress generally thinks, if we back a country, it has to win. And if we lose Ukraine, just as Biden already lost Afghanistan and lost the war against COVID, if they lose in Ukraine, that means that he should be thrown out and they’ll get somebody who can be a better bully and win in the Ukraine. So somehow, the thought of Ukrainian defeat by Russia will not only lose the election for Biden, but it will lead to a loss of NATO being part of the United States’ foreign diplomacy. And that failure, Biden says, will lead people to think, oh, he’s failed, let’s get a winner like Trump. And of course, what Trump will do is indeed end NATO, or at least end the American contributions to NATO, forcing Europe to pay the whole bill. And Europe is going to decide, do we really want to devote all of our growth in GDP to military spending, as if the Russians will invade?

I don’t know if you watched the debate between Biden and Trump. Most people have simply talked about the fact that Biden was showing signs of senility. But worse than his senility is what he said. He said that if the Russians defeat Ukraine, they’re going to march right through Poland.

This is the domino theory that Americans held 50 years ago during the Vietnam War. When I was working at the Chase Manhattan Bank in 1965, the man in the office across the aisle was a naval intelligence person. Intelligence agencies very often put their spies in banks, because that’s how you can trace things. And the naval intelligence officer in charge of Asia told me that if Vietnam defeats America, they’re going to be in Los Angeles next, he actually said it.

Can you imagine the Vietnamese marching into Los Angeles and trying to take it over? It’s like in Casablanca, when Humphrey Bogart tells the Nazis, well, you know, if you try to defeat America, there’s some parts of Brooklyn, I would recommend that you don’t go into.

It’s inconceivable that any democracy or any country in the world that’s not a tight military dictatorship can mount a land army. And without a land army, you can’t invade anyone. America doesn’t have a landed army. And Europe doesn’t. And if they tried to have a landed army, you’d have a revolt, just as you’re seeing in Israel, a revolt by the religious Zionists who are refusing to let themselves be drafted.

So the very thought of a Russian invasion, marching right through to England is silly. No country is going to do that. But that is actually what the American neocons believe. That’s called projection. They’re thinking of what they would do to Grenada. And somehow this is their image of the world. You know, look what we did to Iraq. Well, we invaded. Look what we did to Libya. We invaded and destroyed it. Well, isn’t that what Russia is going to do? Aren’t other countries going to be just like us? That’s the projection that you have in American foreign policy.

NIMA: Michael, we had two important visits of Putin recently. One was to China and the other one was to North Korea. And when you look at these two visits, and especially when it comes to North Korea, what Russia can do, how Russia can contribute to North Korea, the situation they’re having right now?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, the basic plan of Russia and China is, as I said, to create a new economic order. Now, the problem is that they know that the United States is going to oppose this as an existential threat to itself. And if it looks at it as what Biden has said, an existential enemy, then obviously the United States is going to respond in a military way. So while they’re spending the next probably year or two working out the details of BRICS financial relationships, a BRICS bank to finance trade deficits and balance of payments deficits, a whole ideology to juxtapose to the West.

While they’re doing this, they have to realize that, well, we have to do just what Russia had to do after the Soviet revolution in 1917. America’s forcing us to be militarily defensive. And if we don’t defend ourselves, there’s not going to be any opportunity to create the new economic order.

So Putin and China both recognize that you have to put the cart before the horse and begin with the military protection to insulate themselves from any kind of American threat so that they can proceed to create their own destiny.

NIMA: We know that one of the most important countries within NATO is Turkey. Recently, they are asking to join BRICS. And how do you see this type of movement on the part of Turkey and how is it going to affect NATO?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, Turkey’s always tried to play both sides in both the West and Russia and all the other parties at once. That’s becoming much more difficult since the Israeli attack on the Palestinians. You’re having the Islamic countries tell Turkey, where is your loyalty going to be? You can’t go two roads at once, you’ve got to make a choice.

Well, as America prepares to back Israel in the war against Lebanon, I think there’s already warnings to Turkey, don’t let America use your airbase as a source of bombing Lebanon. You have to stop that. And beyond that, there’s now for the first time, a pressure on Turkey saying, look, you joined NATO, because you’d hoped to be part of the European community. The European community is dead. There’s nothing to join that. You have a choice. Either you can become part of an economy that is shrinking and shrinking and shrinking, or you can link your economy to the Eurasian economy where all of the international growth is taking place, and which is also largely Islamic as you are. What are you going to do? And what are your voters going to do when we advocate that Turkey take an Islamic, non-pro-NATO, non-pro-US position?

Erdogan always has been able to play both ways. I was present when he and President Putin’s predecessor Medvedev gave a speech in Yugoslavia over a decade ago, and you could see that Erdogan was trying to be as close to Russia as he could. But then he met with the Americans and tried to be as close to saying, when are we going, how can you promote our coming to Europe? I don’t think he can play that game anymore.

Now, I don’t know any Turkish diplomats to have any inside information at all, but you can see the pressures on him. Turkey is going to have to make a choice, and that choice may be made very quickly if indeed Israel attacks Lebanon.

Do you think that the changes that are happening right now in Europe, are they going to be able to just reconnect their ties with Russia, or the United States is not letting them do that?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Yeah, there is no way that Europe can re-establish links with Russia, unless it explicitly breaks from the United States. Well, of course, that’s what you’ve just seen the elections in France, and they’re pressing modestly for it.

But the American pressure on Europe, European leaders, I should say, the American infiltration and subsidy of the social democratic parties, the Christian democratic parties, the labor parties, is so great that the leaders themselves are so pro-American that you would need a new set of parties there, a new left. And there’s only one left-wing party in all of Europe, and that’s Sarah Wagenknecht’s party in Germany. Needless to say, this is not going to be the dominant party for quite a while.

And so, I think that when President Putin said, it’s going to be an entire generation, 30 years before we can have a relationship with Europe again. I don’t see how Europe can really wake up. It’s going to have to have an ideological change, an economic reorganization. The United States is going to impose sanctions on them. President Trump is going to impose very heavy tariffs on Europe.

The very first choice of Europe is going to be, well, if America is not going to pay for NATO, are we really going to rearm all the armaments and the tanks and the missiles and the weapons and the airplanes that we’ve depleted our stocks and sent them to Ukraine? Are we really going to rebuild that and remilitarize? Or are we going to have a peace dividend where we can rebuild our economies? And the parties are unanimous. We don’t want a peace dividend that would raise wages. Labor would be employed, wages would go up, and we, the financial sector, would lose the class war.

And that’s still what Europe is all about. It has a rotten class war going within it. And the problem is not simply Europe versus the US. It’s the European industrial and financial elite against the population at large. That’s why the population at large voted the existing parties out of power, but they really don’t have a choice except for what’s called the far-right parties, which means the left-wing populist parties or the parties that are saying what the left-wing used to say without any real plan of following what used to be the left-wing socialist policy of active government, subsidy of interest of industry, subsidy of living standards, and building up of the social infrastructure that Europe was indeed doing in the decades or so right after World War II.

NIMA: Do you see that this conflict going for decades in Ukraine or we are getting to the final stages of the conflict in Ukraine?

MICHAEL HUDSON: NATO has promised that this will go on forever and forever until Russia is defeated and can be broken up into five countries, and then America can go and do the same in China and break it up into ethnicities. It will go on for a hundred years, NATO says.

And NATO really governs Europe. The European Commission and NATO are the administrative parts of Europe. And voters really have very little to say about electing local national leaders for all this. So as long as NATO and the European Commission remain in existence, there can’t be any kind of negotiation.

And so President Putin has said famously, the West is non-agreement-capable. So the only kind of negotiation is Russia says, we’re going to win in Ukraine and the negotiation will be, we will dictate the terms of peace. The solution can only be won on the battlefield. It cannot be won by negotiation, because who are we going to negotiate with? You can’t negotiate with Ukraine because they’re American puppets right now, unless we win and we put in our own, the leaders that we backed, probably military leaders and opponents of the current regime. And that’s not a negotiation, that Russia is in a position to dictate the peace. There’s no reason for it to negotiate away anything.

And even if it negotiated, NATO says, well, we’ll promise not to fight. We’ll promise that there’s a ceasefire and then we’ll really hit them. We’ll just pretend to negotiate and then we’ll attack. That’s what NATO does. That’s what America does. And that’s what they’ve already done to Russia again and again and again. And so Russia has said, no negotiation. President Lavrov has said, I think we should downgrade the embassies of Europe here because there is nothing to say. We realize that Ukraine is a puppet of the US, that the European leaders are really NATO generals and they’re all appointed by the US and we can’t negotiate with the US because they lie. They break their word.

So the solution in Ukraine will come when Russia finally decides to defeat the West to such a degree that it can restructure Ukraine and create a domestic government.

Well, the West and NATO said, well, at least what we have is terrorism. At least we can continue to keep lobbing missiles into Ukraine just as Kiev was lobbing missiles into Luhansk and Donetsk. We can just continue to try to destabilize. And at a point then when Russia has been able to neutralize Ukraine itself and the NATO and Americans begin to take off from Romanian bases or Polish bases, then America is going to begin attacking the airfields in Poland, Romania, or wherever there may be F-16 planes capable of carrying atomic bombs.

Because Russia said, if you have a plane capable of carrying an atomic bomb, whenever that plane takes off, whatever it’s carrying, we’re going to not only blow it up, we’re going to blow the base up that it took off from. And blowing the base up means blowing up all the runways, because these planes are very delicate. If there’s a lumpy runway, they apparently tip over and bump their nose.

So, in that sense, Russia will do what apparently America is trying to goad it into doing and extending the war westward, at which point America will say what Biden said. You see Russia’s invading Romania, invading Poland, trying to re-establish the whole Soviet Union and make all of Europe look like East Germany used to look. Well, that’s silly. And what is going to be happening to the European population and its voters during all of this? Hungary is opposing the expansion. Slovakia is, I think, opposing. What are they going to do?

We really can’t tell. Europe has so little political leadership that it’s just completely passive in all of this. That’s the problem. It’s in a state of civilizational collapse, as the Russians say.

NIMA: Do you find the conflict in Taiwan much more important for the United States or is the same way that Ukraine is?

MICHAEL HUDSON: I think America is simply trying to be like a mosquito, bothering China and Taiwan. I don’t think China has any desire to bomb or invade Taiwan at all. It doesn’t have to do any of this. Almost all of Taiwan’s trade is with China. All China has to do is say, okay, you want to be unfriendly, you want to split apart, then no more trade. What’s Taiwan going to do? You want to join the U.S. economy? Well, good luck. Try going that way. Obviously, you would have the Taiwan economy falling apart.

I’ve met many Taiwan officials and they all personally have their investments in mainland China. They’ve all looked forward to investing in China. Unfortunately, most of them are drug dealers. These are central bankers and financial people. They’re trying to reestablish what England did to China with the opium trade. Many businessmen in China, who are not the government leaders, but just businessmen, know that their economic destiny lies with China.

The Chinese essentially can play rope-a-dope. They can go with the flow and say, you really want to be independent? If your independence entails reliance on the United States, you can get all the weapons you want. They’re not going to help you because, as you know, we can wipe you out in 20 minutes. You’re just across the strait. We know you’re not going to attack us because we can wipe you out in 20 minutes. We know that your business people and much of your population wants peace with us, so we’ll just let you go your own way. We’re going to block trade with you. We’re not going to export to you. We’re not going to import from you. Let us know when you change your mind.

NIMA: How do you find Modi’s decision to go to Russia right after his re-election? He’s going to be in Russia and talking with Putin. How important is Russia for India at this particular moment?

MICHAEL HUDSON: India is trying to do what Erdogan has done so well for so many years. It’s trying to play the East and the West against each other. The United States is doing everything that it can to give India essentially to bribe it economically. India is trying to get the best deal that it can.

The United States is trying to say, you know, look at your war up in Nepal and Tibet and Sikkim and Bhutan. You have all these Chinese there. Remember the war?

I remember the war very well when India tried to attack Chinese troops, and the Chinese troops just walked into it. I gave a speech before the Security Council of the United Nations, and I said, you know, there’s only one solution. I was joking, but I said one solution to the Indian problem, that the Chinese will walk into India, they’ll eat all the cattle, and they’ll walk back to China and well, you know, the rest.

The Indian delegates all came up to me, shook my hand and said, you’ve got it. That’s really what the situation is. You know, this is all for show for the voters. It’s basically a show.

Well, all of these Indians have now died of old age. All of this was way back 50 years ago. I think that they realize that there’s no chance of their winning any real military conflict with China. The United States is going to try to give them arms, going to try to provoke some incident that will make China economically unfriendly with India.

I would hope that the Indians are savvy enough not to fall for this. I think they’re probably using the meetings with the United States to say, what will you give us? And now, Modi has gone to meet with Putin, and I bet he’s saying, what will you give us? What will China give us? Give us a real choice so that we can make a decision because it’s going to be very hard for us or any other country in the world to be independent.

When the world is breaking into two parts that are really a civilizational break, you can’t go two ways at once anymore. You can’t try to be a mediator because there’s no mediation. These two political areas are economically separating from each other, and this separation is, I think now, irreversible.

I would hope that India recognizes that. India is supposed to be part of the BRICS. Since Russia is now heading the BRICS, and I think there’s a BRICS meeting coming up in the next few weeks, I think the discussion that Modi is having is, what is our role in BRICS going to be? Do you trust us or not? And I think Putin is probably telling him, I would imagine, that well, India, you are a member of BRICS, but if you’re really taking the US side in discussions, and you’re essentially casting a US-backed veto of the policy decisions that the BRICS are making, then I’m afraid you really don’t belong in BRICS anymore. It’s a different India than it used to be, and I bet that that’s what the discussion is all about.

NIMA: When Turkey joins BRICS, this would be the first country, the first NATO country joining BRICS.

MICHAEL HUDSON: Require a trigger, forcing the decision to make. Erdogan is going to try to avoid making that decision as long as he can. He’s going to try to play it both ways, but if there is an attack on Lebanon, that is going to lead Turkey very quickly, even this year, to say, we can’t be a part of a NATO that is attacking Lebanon and our fellow Islamic co-religionists. We’ll withdraw from [NATO]. And Hungary, why don’t you come with us? You can just imagine what’s going to be happening.

And the US diplomats seem to have no idea of what’s happening. I don’t think they listen to your show.

NIMA: Michael, do you think that Hungary, Serbia, and Slovakia, are they thinking of joining BRICS?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Right now, because of their geographic location, their economic ties are very close to Europe. I think they will not join BRICS until Europe formally breaks up. And they have to wait until their joining BRICS will not result in an economic trade and investment and demographic interruption of all of this.

And what they will try to do is act as a worthy alternative to the current Eurozone leadership. Let’s create a new Europe now that Europe has decided not to become part of the military NATO anti-Russian group anymore. Once NATO is gone, I think all of Europe, not only the three countries you mentioned, but other countries are going to decide how are we going to remake relations.

As I said, it’s going to be very long before Russia trusts them. But I think Russia will trust Hungary and Serbia and other countries that have shown themselves to be supporting Russian interests and not supporting NATO interests all along.

NIMA: You talk about the conflict in Gaza. Do you think at this moment, we’ve learned that United States was offering a defense treaty to Saudi Arabia in order to convince them normalizing their relationship with Israel? And it doesn’t seem that that’s working for Saudi Arabia. How do you find the United States foreign policy in the Middle East and how the face of Middle East is changing in your view?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, Saudi Arabia, again, is an example of an inherently unstable economic situation. Saudi Arabia has a problem. Almost all of its financial wealth has been kept in the United States. And its worry is that this, its holdings of US stocks and bonds are hostages against it taking an active movement away from the West and joining its Near Eastern neighbors.

It’s being pressed right now. It’s being offered all sorts of American armaments like the F-16s. But there must be someone in the Saudi leadership that says, wait a minute, we don’t want F-16s, they don’t work. You know, let’s wait, let’s wait and see what Russia does with them in Ukraine. The American weapons have been shown not to work very well.

And I think Saudi Arabia is certainly under pressure from its own population. Remember, it has a very heavy Palestinian population, just as Jordan does. And the question is, how independent can the Saudi leadership be, not only from its own population, but from the Islamic population in general, despite the Shiite and Sunni splits.

So I think that it had, it is having to think about the unthinkable. It’s having to look at alternatives that have never existed, or been pressing for before. And for the time being, it’s going to try to do nothing, as little as possible. Obviously, the proposed agreement with Israel is over permanently. There’s no way that either Saudi Arabia or I think Jordan also can remain allies, virtually of Israel, and without so much counter pressure that it just won’t work.

The problem is, how independent will the Saudi leadership be of all the forces around them? And how much have their whole leadership been westernized and Americanized, that they’re going to somehow resist this Eurasian movement?

Well, they’re part of the BRICS now too. So what I’ve said about India applies just as well to Saudi Arabia. At the BRICS meeting, I think they’re going to say, well, how do you feel? Are you with us or against us? You got to make a choice. So it’s going to take a while for it to make the choice.

And as in the case of Turkey, the timing of this choice will be determined by America’s overreaching or some local military conflagration making the choice inevitable. You cannot avoid it. It has to be one or the other. And there was no way of really forecasting that kind of seemingly an accident.

But you can be sure that America is going to probably provoke some kind of pressure, overestimating the American position. That’s the problem with America. Like a bully, they overestimate their power and they’ve done it wrong again and again. Recently, the rest of the world is not like Iraq or Libya.

NIMA: Is the Biden administration capable of preventing this attack on Hezbollah?

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, the Biden administration is two things. On the one hand, you have the state department. I have the politicians and amateurs in the state department and White House.

On the other hand, you have the military leaders. Now, the military, I’m sure it’s been announced that they’ve made all sorts of forecasts and games and in every forecast they make, America loses.

But the neocons don’t realize this. There’s a split. The neocons say, we can win anything. You heard what President Biden said. We’re America. We’ve never been defeated.

Well, I guess there’s always a first time.

And the question is, would the army just say no? Or would they pull back? Or would they resign? Well, unfortunately, the way to get promoted in the army is the same way you’d get promoted in, say, the British Navy and the old Gilbert and Sullivan song. You get promoted by going along with what the political superiors want you to say.

But at the same time, they have their own analysis. And even the CIA may have some analysts that they have not fired for being realistic. And the question is, will there be some split here? And the military will simply say, I cannot back this attack. I resign rather than leading to a fight that’s going to lead to our aircraft carriers, our battleships, our troops, our foreign enclaves all being destroyed. That’s another great unknown. But that’s what the choice is going to be.

NIMA: Just to wrap up this session, when you look at BRICS today, you said that we’re going to have a BRICS summit soon. And how long does it take for BRICS to come to a solution that would make its members totally independent of the American system?

MICHAEL HUDSON: I don’t see that coming very soon because they’re really reinventing the wheel. Much of this wheel has already been invented in the 19th century by British classical political economy.

You don’t want economic rent. You want capital formation. You want government to take the lead in natural monopolies and infrastructure. All of this was all worked out in the 19th century.

But neoliberalism has so extinguished and just excluded the history of this economic thought that most of the political leaders of the BRICS countries are simply unaware of this. And the staffs are unaware of this. Certainly, their central bankers are unaware of this, and their economists, if they’re trained in the United States and Europe, are unaware of this.

So they’re working so much, I won’t say in the dark. They know where they want to go, but they haven’t worked out how to get there. And this is going to take a while to get something that’s actually workable.

There’s already so much confusion about discussion of a BRICS currency. They’re not distinguishing between a currency to denominate trade and investment that maybe can be like the euro, and other speculators can buy it, or just a central bank, a version of bancor is in a central bank accounting system of credits and debits. They haven’t studied all of the discussions at the end of World War II over what kind of an international monetary fund should there be between Keynes and the Americans.

So if they’re working without this familiarity with history, and without how other countries have already thought through all of these, the same issues that the BRICS are thinking of, it’s going to take a while.

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42 comments

  1. Neutrino

    Science advances one death at a time. Diplomacy trying to keep up, now insisting on one country at a time.
    An impression that could be held by many is of a petulant, peevish American political class, devoid of historical learning or lessons.

    Getting rid of Biden and his enablers would be a good start. Then tell retired flag rank dudes that they can’t serve on those ubiquitous panels any longer to echo whatever theme is required that week. Expand that to identify the bitter end dead wood idiots in the Killary Kamp and toss in a few Obamas, Boltons and Nulands.

  2. ilsm

    US does not have a “strategy” for arming itself for the real world! It has a healthy (profitable) MIC that delivers weapons far over budget, failing rigged operating tests, and under reliable!

    Last night I listened to part of Biden’s war speech to NATO figureheads.

    He told a number of ‘stretches of truth’. The Biggest is that NATO is stronger than ever! They call Trump a liar!

    The facts are: US is a third smaller in terms ‘order of battle’, its tactical aircraft (as well as ground mechanized/armor) are aged, cannot be kept combat ready and systems like 40 year old F-16 are unsuitable replacements for F-4, and F-100!

    F-35 is even less suited to war than the current aging crop! MIC “experts” want to measure worth of tactical air by average age of the unreliable fleet!

    Their only reason to keep Biden is he is “better for the MIC” thus NATO than Trump.

    Sad state of “our democracy”: disinformed from top down!

  3. CA

    https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1810878399306682575

    Arnaud Bertrand @RnaudBertrand

    Crazy number shared by US Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks at the NATO summit

    ( https://defense.gov/News/Speeches/Speech/Article/3832532/deputy-secretary-of-defense-kathleen-h-hicks-keynote-remarks-strengthening-the/ ):

    “U.S. investments in defense R&D-plus-procurement over the first term of the Biden-Harris Administration — totaling $1.27 trillion — is the highest amount that DoD has invested in these areas across any four-year period throughout the entirety of the Cold War”

    Anyone who’s rational would see such an unprecedented ramp up in weapons as worrying news for the world, but not the Pentagon neocons: Hicks presented it as if it was amazing news, “yeah, we just added $1.27 trillion worth of new weapons on this earth! ”

    Hicks’ entire speech was a study in militaristic hubris, where, in a peak imperialistic comment, she also boasted that “today’s arsenal of democracy is not only American. It’s not only western, either. Today’s arsenal of democracy is global. It’s a testament to what we’ve built over the last 75 years.”

    “Yeah, after decades of trying we’ve managed to globalize our arsenal!”

    And, as if that wasn’t enough, she called on NATO to “double down with urgency and confidence” given “the global pacing challenge presented by the People’s Republic of China”. Sigh…

    This is the very militaristic culture that’s at the heart of so much conflict in this world, with the utterly delusional belief that more weapons and a global expansion of a military alliance looking for enemies to “deter” is going to somehow make things better, instead of fostering the very wars they’re saying they want to prevent. When will they ever learn…

    11:27 PM · Jul 9, 2024

    1. voislav

      US wastes a lot of money on R&D without ever producing combat systems. For example, Bradley IFV replacement has been through multiple rounds of R&D, Future Combat Systems (2003-2009) -> Ground Combat Vehicle (2009-2014) -> Next Generation Combat Vehicle (2017-present), spending tens of billions without producing a single combat vehicle. So that “$1.27 trillion dollars worth of weapons” is not as much as you think.

      1. CA

        “US wastes a lot of money on R&D…”

        As a speculation, I would attribute this to lack of competition or insularity in the R&D process. Possibly the process would work better if “national” enterprises were used at least in part for R&D. Shielding corporations from competition, however, is a recognized problem.

        How much of a problem, in general? I have been pointing out that manufacturing productivity in America has actually been decreasing now for 12 years:

        https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=m2mB

        January 30, 2018

        Manufacturing Productivity, * 1988-2024

        * Output per hour of all persons

        (Indexed to 1988)

        1. ilsm

          DoD program managers are not allowed to manage the programs! They cannot terminate a cost plus contract when it becomes obvious the costs are exploding and performance is dysmal!

          See F-35, which huge is not an exception. DoD has been trying to reform its poor acquisition system since the Packard Commission which started during Reagan term.

          There is a law that congress has to be informed of a 25% overrun and/or similar schedule slip. F-35 was 98% overrun and congress just let the cost plus overruns flow. The program managers should have demanded performance and cost far earlier!

          The first DoD acquisition debacle I am aware of was C-5. Its replacement C-17 was as bad. Sgt York air defense was cancelled, because a show exhibit saw tr\he gatling gun slewed toward the distinguished guest stands.

          KC 46 is a Boeing 767 with plumbing to off load fuel, about the same weight off load as KC-135. The high tech boom system is yet to be made safe on the receiving aircraft, after years!

          US Army’s Future Combat System was killed because the law of physics were recognized before it got to jobs in districts.

          Otherwise, nothing gets “killed”.

          We see Patriot air defense over Kiev!

          1. GC54

            The rest of the world is safer while confronted with overpriced Western MIC hardware that operates poorly/not at all in the real world. Please continue to double down, the last thing needed is to arm neocons and neolibs with effective weaponry

          2. LawnDart

            I was a loadmaster on C5s before moving to 130s– night and day, in terms of reliability and quality. The C5s name, “Galaxy,” was for public consumption, but we crewmembers had another name for it: FRED (Fvdking Ridiculous Economic Disaster), and the only thing reliable about that thing were the breakdowns. If given a 3-day mission, pack for a week, and if longer…

            While the C130 did occasionally breakdown, it was fairly rare. It had begun design in the 1940s and put into production in the 50s, whereas the C5s came about in the late 60s… what a difference a few decades make: while it was fun and exciting to fly one of the world’s largest aircraft, the planes themselves were crap.

            Had some experiences with Patriots too, back in the early 90s, when I got to watch a gaggle of them chasing after Scuds overhead. There are a bunch of reservists who could have told you how effective these Patriots are, but unfortunately, they’re dead.

            I always, always. appreciate the fact that Mr. Hudson provides a transcript of the discussion– much appreciated!

        2. Jams O'Donnell

          It’s not just a problem of productivity. The recent history of Boeing exemplifies all that is wrong with the US MIC. Engineering design and effective prototyping and quality control have been trashed by financially driven bureaucracy, managerial sclerosis and profiteering. There is by now an extensive list of failed and/or inferior and/or very expensive weapons projects made for the US military, many of which have been cancelled.

          However, that’s kind of reassuring for the rest of the world.

  4. GlassHammer

    I can’t recall who said this but “it takes 18+ years to build a soldier and only a few months/years to build that man’s armaments.” Now add to that the fact that each soldier on the front lines requires multiple support staff on the backline doing logistics/supply work.

    So it’s never “to the last man”, your fighting capability is crippled long before that ever happens.

  5. voislav

    A big, overlooked factor in Russian economic development has also been financial sanctions. By cutting off financial services and confiscating Russian oligarch assets the West forced them to shift their wealth back to Russia and reinvest it into Russian economy rather than buying Western real estate, companies and sports teams.

    This not only stopped the bleeding of capital from Russia but created a major influx of capital into Russia. This is also likely to have long-term effects as, even with a peace agreement and lifting of the sanctions, Russian oligarchs will remain cautious about Western assets for many years. Western financial system has permanently lost trust not only in Russia, but around the world, just to seize a few billion dollars from Russian oligarchs who were not pro-Putin to start with.

    1. CA

      “A big, overlooked factor in Russian economic development has also been financial sanctions. By cutting off financial services and confiscating Russian oligarch assets the West forced them to shift their wealth back to Russia and reinvest it into Russian economy rather than buying Western real estate, companies and sports teams…”

      Really important.

  6. JonnyJames

    Anyone who regards Hudson’s, Sach’s, Wilkerson, Ritter, McGovern, (and many others) views as exaggeration are either ignorant of history, engaging in intellectual dishonesty, or outright pushing a false narrative (what used to be called lies). Noam Chomsky is still alive and has been making these sorts of observations for decades. His friend, the late Howard Zinn did as well. One of Chomsky’s disciples, Vijay Prashad also makes these observations. Even folks like Ron Paul is anti-imperialist and has been speaking about these issues for many years. The list is long, but we never hear from these folks on the Telescreens of course. Only the Unified Hegemonic Narrative is allowed in mass media so-called public discourse.

    I’m not sure of the exact dates, but it seems that prof. Hudson was one of the first (along with the late prof; Stephen Cohen) to predict what would happen in Ukraine after the Maidan coup in 2014 and after the Russian SMO. I recall Michael Hudson predicting the destruction of Nordstream well in advance of it happening. And I recall him stating that it was not so much to harm Russia, but US policy was to make Europe more dependent on the US. He has turned out to be correct on this, as he has on many other issues over the years. Thanks to NC for regularly posting his material.

    Also, a giant of genuine journalism, John Pilger, passed not too long ago and should not be forgotten. He covered these issues very well

  7. Alex Cox

    This is a very interesting commentary, but he makes a couple of statements which need substantiation.

    1. “what Trump will do is indeed end NATO, or at least end the American contributions to NATO”. On what basis does the good doctor believe this? Because of something Trump said? Trump says lots of things, but on what basis does he genuinely believe that Trump – hampered and thwarted by the intelligence agencies from day one of his second presidency, and surrounded by neocon advisors (because he makes terrible choices) – will pull out of NATO?

    2. “I’ve met many Taiwan officials … Unfortunately, most of them are drug dealers.” This is a very significant assertion. But is it true? What evidence does he have to support it?

    1. JonnyJames

      You raise a very good point: The DT had 4 years but did bugger-all, but bloviate and BS. His biggest achievement was to cut taxes for the rich, himself and cronies, with bipartisan support. He bent over forwards and backwards for Israel, like the rest. If he becomes elected emperor again, he will do exactly what he did last time, just a bunch of BS.

      He did ramp up sanctions (economic warfare) against his supposed friend, Russia. Attacked Russia’s allies and interests in Syria, Iran. Ramped up hostile sanctions and rhetoric against Russia ally, China. He bombed Syria, almost started WWIII by publicly assassinating General Qasem Soleimani

      So, if the DT is really anti-NATO, he sure has a funny way of showing it.

      The DT has shown clear signs of cognitive decline as well, and there is ZERO evidence other than his usual bullshit, that he will do a damn thing different, just like last time. The very fact that we have the SAME TWO idiot freaks shoved in our faces AGAIN and told we must “vote” for them is (almost) surreal.

      Is this a Twilight Zone simulation?

      1. jrkrideau

        Trump got the USA out of Afghanistan. Oh, Biden carried out the last tiny step but it was Trump who, probably by pure luck, managed to set the stage so that it was pretty well impossible for the Biden menagerie to abrogate the agreement.

        1. fjallstrom

          The Taliban got the US out of Afghanistan by soundly defeating the local forces the US had stood up. Trump made a deal for withdrawal in good order, Biden broke it. The end result was the same, the US withdrew and the Taliban took over.

      2. Chris Cosmos

        The answer to your last question is “yes” in terms of your implication and “something like it” according to some scientific ideas floating around.

        Trump is meeting a need and selling his product. He’s a focal point for normal people’s anger at what their world is coming to. What happened to all the marvels we envisioned for the future–particularly in the realm of leisure? Actually the “world of the future” in the good sense of the word is possible in the techno-scientific sense, i.e., we can create whatever world we want socially, economically, and so on if it weren’t for a certain class of people standing in our way. So Trump kind of thrives on this stuff and he’s kind of entertaining as well. Trump is unlikely to do all that much because he simply does not have the power to do much of anything. Even if he really tried, his orders would simply be ignored as they have in both the Obama and Trump administration.

        Somewhere, maybe it was here, someone did a side-by-side comparison between ’16 and now and found the speech patterns, content delivery, and so on much the same nonsense as before. Behind all the BS Trump at least has a narrative that is anti-globalist and, to the degree people in general and, more importantly, the “donor class”, warm to an anti-globalist perspective, the better.

        1. JonnyJames

          has a narrative – that’s just it, it’s all blah blah and BS as usual.

          anti-globalist?, You mean anti-imperialist, “globalist” is a nonsensical term if you think about it.
          As I outlined above, his ACTIONS do not support such a bold claim. It’s all bullshit all the time. It is disappointing to see how many desperate people WANT to believe the BS, the hard truth is too ugly. We can “hope” that DT will do something different this time, but that is irrational.

          Recent SCOTUS decisions may make the Imperial Presidency even more powerful and above the law, no matter which freak is in the WH.. Stay tuned. So POTUS may be more powerful than we think

          1. Veritea

            How did the SCOTUS decision make the presidency more imperial than it already was? Every president has enjoyed full immunity for all actions public and private up until now.

            Do you think that every president up to now has been completely innocent of any crime? Many of them have been corrupt, and several have committed very serious crimes that would have sunk a private citizen. Obama outright assassinated an American citizen with no consequences! The reason there have been no prosecutions of a president is because the presidency has always enjoyed full immunity for all actions public and private since the nation’s founding.

            SCOTUS actually introduced roadmap for prosecuting presidential crimes for the first time in our nations history. This is a dramatic curtailment of the imperial presidency, not an expansion. Don’t just listen to partisan talking points, think through the issue yourself, the talking points are pretty much all gaslighting without even a kernel of honesty underneath them.

  8. elissa3

    “And I think Saudi Arabia is certainly under pressure from its own population. Remember, it has a very heavy Palestinian population, just as Jordan does.”

    Minor quibble with an otherwise lucid piece. There is no comparison between Saudi Arabia and Jordan. They are as different as Germany and Switzerland are from each other in almost every context, except geographic. . . a bit. The main social pressure in SA is the size of its native population, which has exploded over the past half century. The Palestinian population in SA is minuscule in percentage, and has no say or influence in the political or economic realm. This is not to say that there isn’t a wide popular disgust and anger by Saudis at the ongoing genocide of (mostly) fellow Muslims in Palestine, but, up to now, the famous “street” hasn’t shown itself to be influential/capable in moving official Saudi policy.

    Jordan is another question altogether. The percent of the population that is of Palestinian origin is huge–maybe even a majority. How much Jordanian Palestinians identify as Palestinians and what degree of influence they might have over the monarchy’s decision-making process are two unknowns. I’ve often wondered at how Jordan continues to exist as a nation state since a faction of the Zionist project has occasionally promoted its land as a dumping ground for all Palestinians. ‘You want your own country? Here it is. Goodbye.’ I suspect there’s apart of the blob that is interested in keeping it intact.

  9. Mikel

    MH: “…I don’t see that coming very soon because they’re really reinventing the wheel. Much of this wheel has already been invented in the 19th century by British classical political economy.

    You don’t want economic rent. You want capital formation. You want government to take the lead in natural monopolies and infrastructure. All of this was all worked out in the 19th century.

    But neoliberalism has so extinguished and just excluded the history of this economic thought that most of the political leaders of the BRICS countries are simply unaware of this. And the staffs are unaware of this. Certainly, their central bankers are unaware of this, and their economists, if they’re trained in the United States and Europe, are unaware of this...”

    That is a big issue that will determine how much BRICS + will be able to deliver to their masses.
    The other thing affecting perceptions of the West (other than soft power and propaganda) would probably be global remittances.

    1. Mikel

      And the beat goes on from Argentina to African countries and beyond:

      Today in FT:
      https://www.ft.com/content/137058b2-d48a-4adf-91f1-e25494350e6e/
      https://archive.ph/ecFzH/
      Will Shock Therapy Revive Nigeria’s Economy – Or Sink It Further
      “…However lacking the communication and however severe the impact on ordinary Nigerians, many economists welcome the measures. “I still think that those things were absolutely the right steps to take,” says Tope Lawani, managing partner of Helios Investment Partners, an Africa-focused investment firm, who describes Nigeria as suddenly “super interesting” from an investor’s perspective.
      “I can’t honestly say there’s an obvious plan that one can decipher. But the hardest bit was to rip that band aid off,” Lawani says…”

      1. jrkrideau

        The IMF again, perhaps?

        Austerity has been working well for President Ruto of Kenya. I don’t think the happy citizens have actually burnt down the parliament buildings yet.

  10. ciroc

    Relations between Russia and India are not as good as they seem. The Indian military is rapidly de-Russifying. They are replacing Soviet/Russian weapons with indigenous and Western weapons. New Delhi does not fully trust Moscow and believes that in the event of a conflict between India and China, it is clear that Russia will side with China and stop selling spare parts. Russia cannot sit on two stools either, so the future of the BRICS is uncertain.

    1. CA

      “Russia cannot sit on two stools either, so the future of the BRICS is uncertain.”

      Forgive me, but this seems absurd.

      Simply look at a map, and immediately understand that Russia and China are completely secure when mutually supporting and intolerably insecure otherwise. Also, the Chinese economy is 2.5 times larger than the India economy and 6.5 times larger than the Russian and far more advanced in technology than the Indian economy or much of the Russian economy.

    2. Polar Socialist

      “Rapidly” is doing a lot of work there. At least in the light of new orders for Kalashinikov AK-203 (670,000), T-90 (460+) or Su-30 (12). Or updating some 1200 of the T-72 fleet they have.

      Nevertheless, BRICS doesn’t require unwavering loyalty nor submission, so Russia is not supposed to care much about where India buys it’s weapons or anything else for that matter, as long as India treats Russia with respect and is willing to collaborate when the interests of the two countries align.

      It would make sense also for India to count on Russia as a powerful mediator in any conflict India may face with China, since keeping the peace would be very much in Russia’s interest. Contrast that with how the west would without hesitation use India to “weaken China” by actually pushing for a conflict.

  11. Samuel Conner

    For me, this discussion, in the context of the present world situation, stimulates a sense of cautious optimism.

    Dirigiste approaches to domestic military/industrial capacity plainly are outperforming laissez-faire approaches. When the West eventually notices this, perhaps the question will arise, “what other areas perform better with State involvement that is more intrusive than ‘light touch’ regulation?” Health-care provision comes to mind; there are doubtless others.

    1. Mikel

      It’s a question of maintaining power for the West. And not enough consequences are faced for bad decisions and not serving the people of their respective countries. The failing upward has to stop. The elite have to become uncomfortable.
      The question you mention is one that will only arise for a country with representation that gives a damn about people.

  12. Alice X

    And I think Saudi Arabia is certainly under pressure from its own population. Remember, it has a very heavy Palestinian population, just as Jordan does.

    From Wiki (ok?) (with references) on Saudi Arabia foreign populations (my emphasis):

    The Central Department of Statistics & Information estimated the foreign population at the end of 2014 at 33% (10.1 million).[452] The CIA Factbook estimated that as of 2013 foreign nationals living in Saudi Arabia made up about 21% of the population.[11] Other sources report differing estimates.[453] Indian: 1.5 million, Pakistani: 1.3 million,[454] Egyptian: 900,000, Yemeni: 800,000, Bangladeshi: 400,000, Filipino: 500,000, Jordanian/Palestinian: 260,000, Indonesian: 250,000, Sri Lankan: 350,000, Sudanese: 250,000, Syrian: 100,000 and Turkish: 800,00.[455]

    [453] Alriyadh.com.
    [454] Alriyadh.com. “Number of Pakistani expats exceeds 1.5 m”. Arabnews.com. 29 August 2012.
    [455] “Arab versus Asian migrant workers in the GCC countries” (PDF) [UN broken link]. p. 10.

    From (again) Wiki (with reference) on Jordan’s foreign populations:

    From as early as 1948, Jordan has accepted refugees from multiple neighbouring countries in conflict. An estimated 2.1 million Palestinian refugees, most of whom hold Jordanian citizenship, as well as 1.4 million Syrian refugees, were residing in Jordan as of 2015.[4]

    [4] Ghazal, Mohammad (22 January 2016). “Population stands at around 9.5 million, including 2.9 million guests”. The Jordan Times. Archived from the original on 8 February 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2018.

    Not nearly so many Palestinians as in Jordan, which is not to say that Saudi Arabia is not under pressure from its other own population, but it is a feudal kingdom, so they would like to ignore it if they can [the democratic US likes to ignore its citizens too, funny that]. As the Constitutional Monarchy of Jordan might like to do. Until 1988, when it was revoked, the West Bank Palestinians were Jordanian citizens.

  13. Chris Cosmos

    I think at one time, in the 60s/70s the situation with the Palestinians was general knowledge among leftists. Clearly he had to see that wasn’t true–the Saudi economy was much smaller back in the day so Palestinians were not numerous enough to meet Saudi needs during the energy boom for that region. `

  14. Paul P

    Commentators on the Hobbesian goings on of Russia, China, the US, Europe, Israel, and other nations, never mention climate change. What happens when it really gets hot, the droughts get worse, and the floods increase? A recent link, I believe, reported:
    Greek border agents shooting migrants in their boat or tipping it over. Guns, walls, and geoengineering seems to be where we are headed. I thought that for a long time. I hope I’m wrong.

  15. Oh

    Dr. Hudson has sized up Modi and India correctly. Modi uses the paronoia created towards China to play Russia against the US. He’s controlled by the fanboys who worship the US, mainly the IT crowd. The population in India doesn’t realize the extent of advancement of technology in China and they wring their hands over a tiny skirmish in the Himalayas when about 20 soldiers were killed. They dream that India can fight China and win. Modi uses that to his advantage. The US uses Modi to sell aircraft, missiles and other arms to India. If India does not toe the line when push comes to shove, the US will cut off spare parts for any of this war materiel just as they did with Iran.

    Erdogen is also playing the US to get more out of the US but the US will engineer a coup in Turkey to put him out of business. A similar situation exists with Saudi Arabia. The Saudis may be wanting to join the BRICS to see if they can influence it to help the US. Who knows?

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