A different tune is being played in the United States following the manipulation rates scandal by Libor, an inter-banking lending market. While the numbers of prosecutions are still low, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the deposits guarantee agency, decided on Friday to take action on the matter. The FDIC, which has tutelary authority on more than 5,000 financial institutions, announced that it filed a complaint against 16 international banks and accuses them of predatory behavior against a dozen small American banks, which today have all disappeared.
Only Freddy Mac and Fannie Mae, refinancing entities, have filed official complaints of this scale. Some banks were found guilty at an individual level by regulators. In 2011, UBS unraveled the scandal to the regulators in order to gain immunity but was fined 1.1 billion euros. Barclays eschewed legal prosecutions by paying £290 million in 2012 to American regulators in part. RBS followed Barclays’ steps in February 2013 and paid 450 million euros to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the American Department of Justice.
The message is unmistakable: there are no absolute guarantees and state sovereignty is conditional when it clashes with the interests of powerful states.
We are faced with a "scenario" in which Washington's exclusive and absolute dominance over the entire hemisphere, from Greenland and Canada in the north to the southern reaches of Argentina and Chile.
Whether George HW Bush or Donald J Trump, Americanimperialism is unabated—the pathetic excuses and the violentshock-and-awe tactics don’t matter; the results do.