STATEMENT OF MICHAEL RUPPERT FOR THE INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CONGRESS AT THE
BOR PRESIDENTIAL HOTEL AND RETREAT - MOSCOW, RUSSIA  --  DELIVERED MARCH 7,
2001

March 12, 2001

[On March 7, 2001 I was asked by the Chairman of the International Financial
Congress, Igor Tolstoshein, to make a 10 minute presentation to an
assemblage of approximately 40 of Russia's top economic and financial
experts. Also included in the group were experts from Germany and the
Maylasian Ambassador to Russia, His Excellency Datuk Yahya Baba. I had
traveled to the Congress at the Bor Presidential Hotel and Retreat not
planning on speaking and had not prepared a written statement in advance. My
presentation therefore was not made from a written text but rather from some
hastily assembled notes.

There were only individual translators available that day and I did not tape
record my remarks. The following is the most faithful recreation of my
statement that I can make relying upon the original notes I made just before
speaking.

A full report on the Congress and my evaluations of the current Russian
situation will appear in the March 31 issue of my newsletter From The
Wilderness. That newsletter is available to paid subscribers only and may be
subscribed to through our web site at www.copvcia.com.  I am happy however,
to share this freely with so many of my newfound Russian colleagues and
concerned fellow residents of this very troubled planet. I thank all of the
Russians I met on this trip for their wonderful hospitality, courtesy and
genuine concern in these perilous times. - MCR]

-----

Thank you and good afternoon. I would like to thank the Chairman for this
opportunity to speak to this august group and begin by saying that I am not
an economist or a financial expert but rather a former police investigator
turned journalist. My newsletter, "From The Wilderness" is now read in 16
countries and by 15 members of the U.S. Congress as well as the intelligence
committees of both Houses of the US Congress. We are also read by professors
at 11 universities in the US, Canada and Great Britain. We have a free
research web site at www.copvcia.com.

It is an honor to be in Russia as my mother was, as a cryptographer,
connected with operations of the US Secretary of State Cordell Hull who
visited Moscow in October 1943 to discuss matters regarding the war against
Nazi Germany.

I have spoken out for more than twenty years about the CIA's involvement in
the international drug trade. While in Russia I have listened closely now to
outstanding presentations by many experts and if I have anything significant
to add to this discussion it is to agree clearly with other opinions I have
heard expressed that the study of economics and international finance, if it
is to be effective, must be connected to political and social undercurrents.
A mere study of numbers and graphs often leads to erroneous conclusions
because it does not take into account the unseen events which truly guide
and determine the economic symptoms which are then measured by numbers.

This congress has focused on what many here believe is the imminent collapse
of the U.S. dollar. I do not agree with this concept and I have heard others
here express the same sentiment. While I do not think that the collapse of
the US dollar is imminent I absolutely do believe that the collapse of the
US stock markets is. Too many countries around the world rely upon the US
dollar as a reserve currency. This fact alone, I believe, would prevent the
dollar's collapse. However, as all of the experts here have so clearly
pointed out, the US economy is in serious trouble and I believe that the US
stock market is in immediate peril.

In order to understand this it is essential to study the role of money
laundering in international finance. As much as $200 billion US has been
looted out of Russia in the last ten years and much of it laundered through
US financial institutions like the Bank of New York. I wrote about this in
the fall of 1999. But to place this in context it is necessary to note that
in 1994 the UN estimated that $440 billion a year in illegal drug money was
moved through the world's banking system. Just 18 months ago "Le Monde
Diplomatique" estimated the annual drug flow at $500 billion with the total
annual proceeds of criminal activity amounting to $1 trillion US. And just
two weeks before I came here the "San Francisco Chronicle" cited the
International Monetary Fund as stating that the amount of criminal money
moving through the world economy is $1.5 trillion US each year.

Criminal activity and money laundering has become the world's largest free
enterprise and it is also determining political, economic and military
action around the globe. $1.5 trillion is larger than every national GNP
except for the five largest industrial economies in the world. Now I have
heard the experts here cite truly astounding figures like the $30 trillion
in derivatives in the US market and the overall values of the world economy.
To compare $1.5 trillion and state that this amount is not the most
important component of success or failure is to miss the point entirely.

If two race cars are capable of doing 240 mph the race will be A tie. No one
will win. The world economy is a fierce competition for capital, liquidity,
markets and, perhaps most importantly, currency. Therefore the race car
capable of doing 241 mph is the one that will win the race. That $1.5
trillion a year of highly liquid, low cost, unrestricted capital is what is
determining the results in the present day world economy. This is because,
as noted by former US Assistant Secretary of Housing Catherine Austin Fitts,
"Those with the lowest cost of capital win." Winning, however, comes with a
heavy price. I have confirmed that even now the US government works directly
with some of the biggest drug dealers in history.

I wholeheartedly agree with Russia's brilliant economist Michael Khazin and
others who state that the US engages in serious long term planning and
manipulation of world events. As an example I will cite the fact that in
June of 1999 the Chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, Richard Grasso,
traveled to Colombia and met with leaders of the FARC guerillas who control
a third of that country and who have acquired billions of dollars from
taxation of the drug trade. Grasso's request was that the FARC rebels invest
their drug profits in Wall Street. This was necessary in order to continue
pumping cash into the already precarious investment bubble in America that
had also been partially sustained by the systematic looting of Russia from
1993 to 1999.

The FARC guerillas refused to give Wall Street their money.

A year and half later the United States is implementing another Vietnam
conflict which is just now commencing and which is an absolute necessity to
prevent a total collapse of the US economy. That conflict will not only suck
capital out of Colombia it will open up oil rich lands in rebel territories
to US drilling and it will create thousands of displaced persons who will
become low cost labor for multi-national corporations seeking to build
factories in South America.

 As the Euro seeks to establish itself as an alternate currency to the US
dollar - a healthy competition that I believe would diversify and strengthen
the world's economy - you here in Europe should take note of leaders like
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez who has opposed America's "Plan Colombia." Just
recently the European Union voted unanimously, with one abstention, to
oppose this new Vietnam War. If South America is to resist this war it will
need strong economic support to pull away from US domination and the
influence of the Central Intelligence Agency.

This brings to light what I consider to be an emerging determinant of
economic and political realties in this era of globalization - geography. I
have noticed that in recent years the drug trade is following businesslike
principles that tend to reduce transportation and distribution costs. The
American drug market is now predominantly supplied by cocaine and heroin
from South America. Europe and Russia have been increasingly supplied by
heroin from the Golden Crescent in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And the Asian
drug market is receiving most of its supplies from Southeast Asia. We are
seeing less and less large scale smuggling over long routes and a trend
toward efficient and more cost-effective management of the trade that
produces liquid, hard currency.

Just before coming to this conference I read in the Associated Press, Agence
France Press and other reliable sources that the Taliban has recently
eradicated most of its 300 ton opium crop in Afghanistan. If true, I view
this as a form of economic warfare against Russia because it would drive
opium production more into Southeast Asia and Colombia. However, I now
suspect that this will result in a shift of opium production to the Caucasus
under the Kurds which will see an increase in smuggling through Armenia,
Georgia, and Azerbaijan. I should note that both the American Vice President
Richard Cheney and the designated Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
are members of the US-Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce. Such a move would have
the effect of drastically shortening smuggling routes and costs into Western
Europe and bypassing unstable areas of the Balkans.

I have received additional reports that Uzbekistan is now awash in the opium
poppy and, as in the US with the CIA, that Russian military and intelligence
agencies facilitate the trade as a means of protecting access to hard
currency. The point here is not that the US it totally evil or the only
country doing these things. But the US is far and away the most advanced
nation when it comes to the use of such methods to achieve superiority.  As
Khazin has noted the US and Britain and Germany started the conflict in
Kosovo in 1999 to stave off a collapse of western markets following the
Asian collapse of 1997-8. Now Colombia is a last-ditch effort to protect the
US markets and European opposition is jeopardizing that plan.

This is one of the reasons that I believe that as long as European countries
play in a game created by and controlled by the US, and in which the US
holds back critical information and unseen trump cards, the results will
always be the same. That is one reason why I totally favor decriminalizing
drug use throughout the world.

I am not anti-American, I love my country. But I see it succumbing to the
same level of criminality that now eats at the rest of the world. We have
talked about the looting of Russia but that same looting has begun in the
US. Last year $59 billion US was looted from the Department of Housing and
Urban Development. That money disappeared into US markets and into offshore
havens. Perhaps trillions more is missing from the US Department of Defense.
We looted our Savings and Loan Institutions in the 1980s and we now stand
poised to loot our Social Security System.

It has become a "search and destroy" world economy in a climate of
increasing economic disparity and this can only lead to apocalyptic results.
A snake eating its own tail is not nutritious. That is why I believe that a
healthy Euro, using different strategies for wealth creation, can bring some
sanity back into the picture. For in the current modality the only
inevitable course is for world governments to seek to "out-crook" each other
in competition for the cheap capital afforded by criminal activity. This can
only end in war.

As an example of the highest form of criminal activity imaginable I would
ask you to look at the depleted uranium scandal in Europe. This was not a
matter of US imperialism or recklessness. This was a matter of corporations
that produce nuclear waste seeking to boost their stock values by increasing
net profits. As a result they sold a product they knew to be contaminated
with transuranics and  plutonium and U-235 to the nations of Europe without
telling them and, as a result, portions of Kosovo will be radioactive -
forever. This does not address the horrible carnage in Iraq, many times
greater than Kosovo, where thousands of children are dying of birth defects
and leukemia and the southeastern portion of that country will also be
uninhabitable virtually forever.

The first thing that our Chairman, Igor Tolstoshein, said to me when he
picked me up at the airport was, "Why is President Bush uniting all of
Europe?" His observation was most perceptive. As a matter of defensive
reaction to increasing economic exploitation, Europe is indeed uniting in
unimagined ways as Germany invests in Russia and Russia enters into
agreements with Germany and France for upgrades of the MiG 29. Indeed, I
again strongly concur with Michael Khazin that the WTO and globalization
will fail as the world retreats into three dominant economic spheres of
activity: The Western Hemisphere, Europe, and Asia.

What is most telling here is a recent quote by U.S. Senator John McCain as
the United States strenuously opposed the creation of a European Union Rapid
Deployment Force. In discussing NATO he said, "The issues that confront us
go to the very core of our existence as an alliance. Fundamental questions
regarding the future of NATO stand before us. I am afraid that our
geographical divide is increasingly becoming a functional one. Our
perspectives are diverging."

In order to respond to this crisis what is essential is that the world find
new ways of creating wealth that are beneficial rather than destructive. I
refer this Congress to the web site of former U.S. Assistant Secretary of
Housing and former managing Director of the Wall Street investment bank
Dillon Read, Catherine Austin Fitts. She is a true innovator in alternative
means of wealth creation and she has been my greatest tutor on matters of
economics and fiscal policy. Her web site is at www.solari.com. I regret
that she was not at this Congress. But she is very accessible and eager to
help create a safer, healthier and more profitable world. She has a profound
understanding of American political economics and a wealth of information to
offer those seeking creative solutions.

I would like to thank the Chairman for this opportunity to address this body
and conclude by saying that I am an optimist and I believe that the world
will survive these impending challenges even though I am afraid that there
will be some serious dislocations before the crisis passes.

Michael C. Ruppert
Publisher/Editor
"From The Wilderness"
www.copvcia.com

[A FULL REPORT ON THE MOSCOW CONFERENCE WILL BE INCLUDED IN THE MARCH 31
ISSUE OF FROM THE WILDERNESS AVAILABLE BY HARD COPY TO PAID SUBSCRIBERS
ONLY - SUBSCRIBE TODAY!]

(c) COPYRIGHT 2001. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. FROM THE WILDERNESS PUBLICATIONS
AND MICHAEL C. RUPPERT.




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