Triggering Economic Disaster: the Insiduous Role of the International Monetary 
Fund (IMF)

by  James  Corbett
http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=30188

by  James  Corbett


We've all heard the old adage about adding insult to injury but the IMF has 
turned it into an art form. The new IMF Director, Christine Lagarde, 
came to Washington this week begging for yet more billions so the fund 
can continue propping up insolvent European banks and wrapping 
developing countries around the globe in debt chains. Lagarde is on a 
political junket with the aim of raising an additional $500 billion for 
the IMF, money that will be used for future Eurozone bailouts and other 
financial crises, or so they say. The speech was delivered 64 years to 
the day after Truman's signing of the Marshall Plan (coincidence, 
surely) as she asked the American taxpayers to search their hearts, take one 
for the team and dig deep to help foot the bill for Europe. 

Except
 this is not 1948 and Europe is not recovering from the Nazis. It's 2012
 and the Eurozone is falling apart at the seams because it was a failed 
concept from the beginning. The cracks in the Euro have been showing for
 years, despite the best efforts of the Goldman Sachs gang to paper over
 the debt swap deal that helped Greece lie its way into the Eurozone and
 helped Goldman earn 12 percent of its entire trading and investment 
revenue in 2001 on a single day. Lagarde didn't mention this in her 
speech, but she did assure the crowd that at the IMF “your money is used
 prudently.”
            
The only thing that is remarkable about this is that the public is expected to 
believe it. No one who has any understanding of the IMF's past or 
how it operates would expect that these funds to be used in any other 
way than they always have been: as leverage over the governments that 
sign their peoples on to debt servitude. In the 1990s the IMF put 
“stipulations” on their loan package for Brazil that required amendments to the 
country's constitution, and then lobbied extensively for those 
changes. Between the start of IMF involvement in Peru in 1978 and the 
second round of loans in the 1990s, the appropriately acronymed SAP 
(structural adjustment program) managed to quadruple illegal coca 
production by devastating local farmers and leaving them to choose 
between growing coca or starving. They chose coca.
            
There are countless other disasters. And countless swindles. Billions of 
dollars in IMF loans to Russia in the 1990s were diverted straight into 
the Swiss bank accounts of oligarchs and gangsters. One $4.8 billion 
dollar loan program administered by the fund in 1998 went in one door of the 
Russian central bank and straight out the other. The people never 
saw a ruble of it and were left with unemployment rates, stock market 
losses and currency devaluation that rivaled the Great Depression.
            
The fallout from these operations is invariably the same. The people figure out 
that they've been footed with the bill for someone else's party and the riots 
begin. We've been witnessing this in Europe since the Euro 
crisis began and it's flaring up again. This week a 77 year old Greek 
pensioner shot himself in the head outside parliament because, he said, 
he didn't want to have to start picking through trash in order to feed 
himself. The IMF issued a statement Thursday that it was “deeply 
saddened” by the incident, but the people of Athens have taken to the 
streets yet again, with thousands flocking to the site of his death and 
many scuffling with police.
            
These types of protests aren't merely predictable, they're part of the plan. 
The IMF and World Bank documents that leaked out in 2001 detailed the 
four step plan for looting a country, including the “IMF riot” stage. 
People take to the streets to protest the austerity measures that are 
tied to the IMF loans, causing foreign capital to flee, governments to 
go bankrupt, and foreign speculators to pick up the pieces at fire sale 
prices. The riots happened in Indonesia in 1998. And Bolivia in 2000. 
And Ecuador and Argentina in 2001. What's happening in Europe is not an 
exact analogue, and it's aimed at centralizing power in the EU in 
Brussels and the ECB in Frankfurt, but that the IMF has seen the crisis 
as an excuse to get its foot in Europe's door as a lender is 
particularly telling.
            
This is how the game is played and that's why the politicians for the most 
part are happy to go along with it. After they serve their term in the 
cockpit, they jump out with a golden parachute and leave the people to 
crash in the flaming debt bubble the politicians have created. This is 
why Lagarde is likely to get her $500 billion, or something 
approximating it, including an extra $63 billion that the US is slated 
to start paying under a new quota agreement. And the band plays on.
James  Corbett is a frequent contributor to Global Research.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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