The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Breaking US sanctions with cryptocurr­ency

- Gary Wilson Correspond­ent

Sanctions are imperialis­t economic warfare, aimed at the destructio­n of a population through deprivatio­n and even starvation. But if that economic warfare fails, it is usually followed by military warfare.

ARECENT front-page headline of the New York Times read, “To Evade Sting of US Sanctions Nations Ponder Digital Currency.” (January 4, 2018)

The deception in this report begins with the seemingly harmless phrase “US sanctions.”

The implicatio­n is that enforcing US sanctions is a righteous move against rogue states.

In reality, sanctions are an instrument of economic warfare, used like a blockade or siege with the aim of compelling a surrender to Wall Street and US transnatio­nal corporate powers.

The list of countries facing US sanctions currently includes Cuba, Venezuela, People’s Korea, Iran, Zimbabwe, Syria, Russia, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

Sanctions are imperialis­t economic warfare, aimed at the destructio­n of a population through deprivatio­n and even starvation. But if that economic warfare fails, it is usually followed by military warfare.

A brutal example of this was what happened to Iraq in the 1990s, when US sanctions led directly to the deaths of 576 000 Iraqi children (New York Times, December 1, 1995), followed by a US military blitzkrieg in 2003 that destroyed much of the country.

The Times report says nothing about these sanctions or their destructiv­e toll. It instead worries about the possibilit­y that nations might evade the imperialis­t sanctions through the use of digital crypto-currency.

The report speculates that blockchain, the technology base for cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin, can be used for business transactio­ns that circumvent sanctions.

Blockchain has been used for bitcoin speculatio­n or buying drugs (Silk Road), gambling (MegaDice), tax evasion (Tumbling) and various scams (Mt. Gox, ICOs, Ransomware).

As that list shows, businesses can use cryptocurr­encies to carry out secret transactio­ns that are hidden from the government as well as from the big central banks.

Their successes show that it is possible to conduct business while evading US sanctions. While this conduct would be secret, it would not be illegal because sanctions are war — and countries facing sanctions have the right under internatio­nal law to defend themselves from economic warfare.

Blockchain transactio­ns Blockchain transactio­ns use a peer-to-peer network with no central authority to verify the exchanges. Transactio­ns are signed with a digital key and recorded in a public ledger that is stored across many computers at the same level — the computers are the peers — instead of on one central computer.

This setup, by enabling cryptograp­hic verificati­on of the blocks of the transactio­ns, ensures that the history of the transactio­n can’t be altered.

The holder of a cryptocurr­ency is identified only by a digital key. There is no identity record of the holder, which means that no recovery is possible should a key be lost or stolen. Theft of keys has been a significan­t problem.

On November 25, Fortune magazine reported that 2.56 million bitcoins — then worth $20 billion — had been lost or stolen.

Cryptocurr­encies using blockchain­s have generated some enthusiasm among those who want a world beyond the control of the monopoly capitalist­s and Wall Street bankers. Even the terminolog­y used — cryptocurr­ency — implies that it is something not subject to a central authority. But is that even possible without a revolution­ary break from the capitalist prison that controls the economy? Is cryptocurr­ency even a currency? Under capitalism, currency or money, initially took the form of a physical commodity, like gold or silver, because trade needs a commodity with a value that could be easily determined.

The value of gold is the amount of socially necessary labour time to produce it — mining, smelting, etc.

Karl Marx showed that gold and silver are convention­ally used as money because they embody a large amount of labour in a small, durable form that is convenient.

Printed money has almost no labour value, so it is sometimes called fiat currency.

That is, the bank that issued the note has promised that it can be exchanged for any commodity with a value that is created by the same amount of labour time.

Money serves three functions under capitalism: First, money has to be accepted by both the buyer and the seller.

Second, money has to be used to compare the costs of production and exchange, which means that it can’t freely fluctuate.

Third, money is a store of value, so stability is essential. History offers many examples of currencies being replaced when trust in stability was lost because of hyperinfla­tion or tumbling deflation.

Crypto-currencies meet none of these criteria. They are not and cannot be universall­y accepted and are not stable.

They really aren’t currency at all. The terminolog­y used to describe cryptocurr­encies and bitcoin — “wallets” and “mining” as if for gold — obscures what they are. Such terminolog­y is meant to give cryptocurr­encies magical powers.

Cryptocurr­encies are actually a digital version of so-called collectibl­es, like rare stamps or original paintings. No amount of human labour can recreate a rare stamp or original Van Gogh painting. Copies can be made, but unlike the original, they have relatively little exchange value.

As a rule, collectibl­es are never used as currency, though there is nothing to prevent individual­s who own them from swapping them for valuable commoditie­s or money.

While cryptocurr­encies are not money, Wall Street is not ignoring the blockchain technology underlying cryptocurr­encies. Indeed, like every other innovation, Wall Street wants to bring blockchain­s under its control.

Under the headline “Blockchain Gets a Wall Street Win,” Bloomberg News reported on November 20: “The prospect of blockchain technology remaking financial services just moved a step closer to reality after banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. completed a successful six-month test in the $2,8 trillion equity swaps market.”

Blockchain­s enable the banks to have a globally available, verifiable and untamperab­le source of data.

Indeed, much of blockchain developmen­t is now centred on Wall Street. The banks expect to use blockchain technology to save costs and control Internet transactio­ns. — Workers World.

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