Having voiced fears that the US would seek to install some form of puppet government in Iraq, I thought it was at least taking some time to consider Bush’s Feb 25 speech, promising democracy, and repudiating the idea that US occupiers would seek to exploit Iraqi resources for their own ends. Others, more cynical than I, ignored it completely. Two days later Charles Krauthammer was announcing the policies the US imperial government should follow, using Iraq’s resources to pay off scores against the French, the Russians and others
We need to demonstrate that there is a price to be paid for undermining the United States on a matter of supreme national interest. [emphasis added, para on UNSC snipped]
Second, there should be no role for France in Iraq, either during the war, should France change its mind, or after it. No peacekeeping. No oil contracts. And France should be last in line for loan repayment, after Russia. Russia, after all, simply has opposed our policy. It did not try to mobilize the world against us.
Unlike William Safire, who has been pushing a similar line for months, Krauthammer does not even bother with the figleaf of suggesting that these decisions would be taken by a grateful Iraqi government.
What’s really interesting about recent developments, though, is the developing attitude of the Republican establishment towards government debt, which is essentially that of banana republic populism. The three basic tenets of banana republic populism are:
(a) We should borrow as much money as we feel like spending, preferably from foreigners
(b) It’s OK to repudiate debts to “bad” foreigners
(c) Any foreigner who doesn’t do exactly what we want at all times is a “bad” foreigner
Greg Mankiw just got into a lot of trouble from hardcore Republicans for being insufficiently enthusiastic about (a). Krauthammer and Safire have repeatedly emphasised (b) in relation to a US-controlled Iraq, and the same line would obviously sell in relation to the US government’s own debt. And (c) is being shouted from the rooftops at every opportunity.
Banana republic populism actually has it easier in the US than in the Third World because the vast majority of US debt is denominated in US dollars. Rather than repudiating, the US government can simply print all the dollars it needs and use some of the proceeds to compensate the domestic holders of US public debt (a rapidly dwindling proportion in any case).
The only question arising from this is why foreigners should be willing to hold $2 trillion worth of such a dubious security at interest rates of 4 per cent, and, even more, why they should be willing to buy another $500 billion worth every year.