Interview
and editing by Jared Israel
An
interview with Michel Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa
The Bretton Woods Conference, referred to in the following interview, is the
popular name for the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference that took
place, in 1944, at Bretton Woods vacation resort in New Hampshire. Attended by
the representatives of 44 nations, it resulted in the creation of the
International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, more commonly known as the World Bank .Ed.
Chossudovsky: When an IMF mission goes into a country and requires the
destruction of social and economic institutions as a condition for lending
money - this is very similar to the physical destruction caused by NATO
bombing. The IMF will order the closing down of hospitals, schools and
factories. That's of course more cost effective than bombing those hospitals,
schools and factories, as they did in Yugoslavia , but the ultimate result is very
similar: the destruction of the country.
The IMF has what is called the MAI - the Multilateral Agreement on Investment. It's
the ultimate investment treaty. Signing leads to the economic destruction of
the targeted country. Well, really, war is simply the MAI of last resort.
Jared: What are your thoughts on the demands of the folks protesting now
in Washington ?
Chossudovsky: Well, lots of people have converged on Washington to protest the Bretton Woods
system, the IMF and the World Bank. The question is: what are we fighting for?
I suspect the dominant position among the NGOs [Non-Governmental Organizations]
is still that we need to make them work for the poor and so forth. I think this
approach, which developed from the "50 Years Is Enough" campaign
against the Bretton Woods institutions is a mistake. And increasingly people
are challenging it, questioning the legitimacy of these Washington institutions.
But still there's a lot of confusion. Some think the IMF and World Bank are
playing contradictory roles, which is not so. And also there's a tendency to
see these institutions in isolation. In fact they are simply two tools used by
the Western elite to destroy nations, to turn them into territories.
Jared: You think some people are fooled by the World Bank?
Chossudovsky: They believe the World Bank has adopted a humane approach,
that it's involved in poverty alleviation whereas the IMF creates poverty. Or
they even think there's a conflict between the two. That's nonsense. The World
Bank is doing essentially the same job as the IMF; it merely has different
responsibilities in the Third World . In a way, it is far more dangerous precisely because [of the fact
that] its supposed mandate to alleviate poverty disarms critics. The simple
fact is: Wall Street is behind both these institutions. They are run by bankers
not sociologists.
Chossudovsky: More important: a lot of people don't see the link to NATO. Very
few of the organizations criticizing the Bretton Woods institutions opposed the
attack on Yugoslavia . They didn't talk about it in Seattle and they aren't doing it in Washington now. They campaign against free
trade, against the IMF, in favor of the Jubilee campaign to cancel third world
debt, but not against war. But free trade and war go hand in hand. It was true
with the British in the 19th century when they forced the Chinese to
"freely" purchase opium and it is true today.
And there's a good deal of coordination between the IMF and NATO. You saw it in
Kosovo. The IMF and the World Bank had set up a postwar economic plan including
free market reforms well before the onset of bombing. They work together. If a
country refuses IMF intervention, NATO steps in, or NATO and various covert
agencies, and they create the proper conditions for IMF programs to be imposed.
Chossudovsky: The countries that accept the IMF, like Bulgaria and Romania , they may not get bombed but they
are destroyed with the pen. In Bulgaria the IMF implemented the most
drastic reforms, IMF medicine, which decimated social conditions - pensions
slashed, factories closed, dumping of cheap finished goods, elimination of free
medical care and transportation services and so on.
And it's not just NATO. We see that in Central Asia and the Caucasus . Hand in hand with the imposition
of IMF and World Bank reforms and privatisation program we have not only NATO
but also CIA covert intelligence operations - the institutions of war and economic
management interface with one another at a global level.
So right now various countries are being softened up with regional conflicts
that are financed overtly and covertly by the Western elite. The KLA is just
one example of an externally financed insurgency. You see these manipulated
conflicts especially wherever there are strategic pipelines, and they are
linked to the drug trade and the CIA , covertly, then openly linked to NATO and
official US foreign policy, and finally to the IMF, the World Bank and regional
banks and private investors. Links in a chain.
Let's categorize these global institutions: you've got the United Nations
system and peace keeping; they play a role and they are interfacing with NATO
as well. Then you've got the IMF and the World Bank, and the regional
development banks like the ADB, the Asian Development Bank, and so on. In Europe it's the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development. These are the main arms.
Sometimes war creates the conditions, and then the economic institutions come
in and pick up the pieces. Or conversely the IMF itself does the destabilizing,
as they did in Indonesia . They insisted on cutting off
transfer payments to the various states in the federation. Now that fractures a
country like Indonesia which has 2,000 islands with a
system of local governments. It is the geography of the bloody place. So they
leave these islands to their own devices.
Do you see what that accomplishes?
Chossudovsky: Yes, for example for education and so on. By doing this -
and incidentally they did it in Brazil as well - they destabilize the
country because in order to have a country there must be fiscal coherence, a
system of fiscal transfers. So in a place like Indonesia , each of these islands becomes a
small state. And of course now the idea of going it alone becomes far more
attractive to the many different ethnic groups. Of course they [that is, the
planners] are fully aware of this - they have made it happen time and again. It
took place in Yugoslavia ; it took place in Brazil ; it took place in the former Soviet Union where the regions are left to their
own devices because Moscow doesn't transfer any money. Potentially
it could happen in the United States as well. It is guaranteed to
produce a situation of conflict, internal strife.
Chossudovsky: Yes because people are impoverished to such an extent that
they start fighting.
Chossudovsky: Incidentally in Somalia there weren't any ethnic groups,
but it worked there too. You don't need a multi-ethnic society to have
divisions, to have Balkanization.
Israel: And you're saying this is part and parcel of a plan for Empire?
Chossudovsky: I am saying this is recolonization, countries are
transformed into territories, colonies essentially.
Israel: What distinguishes the two?
COUNTRIES VERSUS TERRITORIES
Chossudovsky: A country has a government. It has institutions. It has a
budget. It has economic borders. It has customs. A territory has only a nominal
government, controlled by the IMF. No schools and hospitals, as those have been
closed down on orders of the World Bank. No borders because the WTO has ordered
free trade. No industry or agriculture because these have been destabilized as
the result of interest rates of 60% per anum and that is also the IMF program.
Israel: 60% per year?
Chossudovsky: In Brazil it's much higher. I'm looking at Botswana now. The
interest rate is horrendously high.
Israel: And this is imposed by the IMF?
Chossudovsky: They put a ceiling on credit. Do you see? So people can't
get bank loans; it drives interest sky high and that kills the economy. Then
they open it up to free trade. So the local capitalist enterprises have to
borrow at 60% from the local banks and then they have to compete with
commodities from the United States or Europe where interest rates are 6 or 7%. These
reforms are essentially aimed at destroying local capitalism.
Israel: So how do we fight this?
Chossudovsky: Not with a single-issue movement. We can't focus solely on
the Bretton Woods institutions, or the WTO, or environmental issues or genetic
engineering; we have to look at the totality of relations. When we look at the
totality we see the link to the use of force. Beneath this economic system lie
the undercover features of the capitalist order: the military-industrial
complex, the intelligence apparatus and the links to organized crime including
the use of narcotics to finance conflicts aimed at opening nations to Western
control.
We have gone from gunboat diplomacy to missile diplomacy. In fact it is not
missile diplomacy. It is sheer bombing.
Israel: You said that part of the military intelligence apparatus is
gangsters. I know that you have been writing material about how drugs is
actually an economically powerful force.
Chossudovsky: Well it is more complicated than that. Because in fact the
gangsters are the instruments of big capital. They are not - they don't overshadow
the system in any way. The gangsters are people who can be easily used
precisely because they are not responsible to anybody. So it is much more
convenient.
Let's say you install Hacim Thaci [leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army] in the
seat of government in Kosovo. It's much more convenient to have a gangster like
this running a country than to have an elected prime minister that is
responsible to citizens.
The best thing is to have an elected gangster, somebody like Boris Yeltsin,
that's the best - get an elected gangster. We have elected gangsters in the US
as well.
Why? Because elected gangsters are much easier to control than elected
non-gangsters. But we must understand these gangsters are pretty obviously
subordinate - when we say it is the criminalization of the colony, it is not
true. It's the other way around. You are never going to have a situation where
these gangsters will be given any power. The big ones perhaps... So there is a
certain interpenetration of legal and illicit trade. But in effect illicit
trade is always subordinate to large scale financial and business undertakings.
An important aspect of this is that the IMF creates the conditions for the
growth of illicit trade and for the laundering of dirty money, all over the world.
That is very clear because when legal economies collapse under the brunt of IMF
reforms what are you left with? It's the grey economy; it's the criminal
economy.
Israel: And that encourages the development of forces that can be used to
replace potentially responsible legal forces.
Chossudovsky: Yes and that type of collapse in legal economic systems also
creates the conditions for developing insurgencies, destabilizing elected
governments, closing down of institutions and transforming countries into
territories which are then run as colonies.
From: Emperor's Clothes www.tenc.net
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