Dollar is no longer suitable for mutual settlements

Radio Free Europe
Dollar is no longer suitable for mutual settlements

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov in an interview with International Affairs magazine on August 23 said "the time has come when we need to go from words to actions and get rid of the dollar as a means of mutual settlements, and look for other alternatives," Russian news agencies reported. "Thank God, this is happening, and we will speed up this work," in addition to taking other "retaliatory measures" in response to a growing list of U.S. sanctions, he said.

As Radio Free Europe writes in the article Russia Vows To Speed Up Efforts To Stop Using U.S. Dollar In Trade, Iran, which has also been targeted with a slew of U.S. sanctions this year, has similar reasons to want to abandon the U.S. dollar, which for decades has been the world's main reserve currency and the medium of exchange for trade in oil, copper, and other vital commodities. Both Iran and Russia are major oil exporters whose oil industries and exports have been targeted by U.S. sanctions.

China has for years sought to depose the dollar as the reigning global currency and currently is embroiled in a major trade struggle with the United States, with both sides ratcheting up tariffs on each other's exports. China's yuan has sometimes been mentioned as a possible substitute for the dollar in global trading.

Russian Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak recently noted that a growing number of countries are interested in replacing the dollar as a medium for settling global oil trades and other transactions. “There is a common understanding that we need to move towards the use of national currencies in our settlements. There is a need for this, as well as the wish of the parties,” Novak said. “This concerns both Turkey and Iran. We are considering an option of payment in national currencies with them. This requires certain adjustments in the financial, economic, and banking sectors” to accomplish, he said.

Iran is moving to ban the use of the U.S. dollar in trade, in light of U.S. sanctions that prohibit it from using the dollar. And last year, Turkey and Iran signed an agreement to use their own currencies for trading purposes. As with Russia and Iran, U.S. relations with Turkey have soured since President Donald Trump took office last year.

With U.S. sanctions on Iran's oil sector due to go into effect in November, Iran has signed several agreements with other countries to use other currencies and even cryptocurrencies in trade deals. Tehran is currently in negotiations with Russia to use their national currencies in trade.

During a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last autumn, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that joint efforts to drop the U.S. dollar in bilateral trade were the best way to get around -- and respond to -- U.S. sanctions.

He also told the Russian leader that using other currencies besides the dollar more frequently would “isolate the Americans.”

While some analysts say the U.S. sanctions are highlighting the leverage that the United States has over Russia, Iran, and other countries' economies because of its dominant currency, others say that using the U.S. dollar as a weapon could backfire on Washington and eventually lead to the toppling of the currency's status in the world. "The potential use of the U.S. dollar as a baseball bat has been evident for more than a decade for Russians, Chinese, and Iranians. For this reason, they have been exchanging their dollars for other currencies for years," said Federico Pieraccini, analyst with the Strategic Culture Foundation.

By "weaponizing" the dollar, he said that Washington risks prompting more and more countries to consider abandoning it as a medium of world trade in a move he said could prove "devastating" for "Washington's economic power" in the long run.

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