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Trapped in IMF debt, Argentina turns to Russia and joins China’s Belt & Road
Mulitpolarista ^ | 02/11/2022 | Benjamin Norton

Posted on 02/11/2022 8:00:19 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Argentina is trapped in $44 billion of IMF odious debt taken on by corrupt right-wing regimes. Seeking alternatives to US hegemony, President Alberto Fernández traveled to Russia and China, forming an alliance with the Eurasian powers, joining the Belt and Road Initiative.

Argentina's President Alberto Fernández meets with Russia's President Vladimir Putin and China's President Xi Jinping in February 2022

The United States constantly intervenes in the internal affairs of Latin America, organizing coups d’etat, destabilizing independent governments, trapping nations in debt, and imposing sanctions. Washington sees the region as its own property, with President Joe Biden referring to it this January as “America’s front yard.”

Seeking alternatives to US hegemony, progressive governments in Latin America have increasingly looked across the ocean to form alliances with China and Russia.

Argentina’s President Alberto Fernández did exactly that this February, taking historic trips to Beijing and Moscow to meet with his counterparts Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.

Fernández signed a series of strategic agreements, officially incorporating Argentina into Beijing’s international Belt and Road Initiative, while expanding economic partnerships with the Eurasian powers and telling Moscow that Argentina “should be the door to enter” Latin America.

China offered $23.7 billion in funding for infrastructure projects and investments in Argentina’s economy.

In the meetings, Fernández also asked for Argentina to join the BRICS framework, alongside Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa. Xi and Putin reportedly both agreed.

“I am consistently working to rid Argentina of this dependence on the IMF and the US,” Fernández explained. “I want Argentina to open up new opportunities.”

The Argentine president’s comments and meetings with Putin and Xi reportedly angered the US government.

Argentina is trapped in odious debt with the US-controlled IMF

Argentina is a Latin American powerhouse, with significant natural resources and the third-largest economy in the region (after Brazil and Mexico, both of which have significantly larger populations).

But Argentina’s development has often been weighed down by debt traps imposed from abroad, resulting in frequent economic crises, cycles of high inflation, and currency devaluations.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) – a de facto economic arm of the United States, over which Washington alone has veto power – has significant control over Argentina, having trapped the nation in huge sums of odious debt.

In 2018, Argentina’s right-wing President Mauricio Macri requested the largest loan in the history of the IMF: a staggering $57.1 billion bailout.

Macri was notorious for his corruption, and this was no secret at the time. By agreeing to give such an enormous sum of money to Macri’s scandal-plagued government, the IMF knew it was ensnaring Argentina in debt it would not be able to pay off. But this was far from the first time the US-dominated financial instrument had trapped Argentina in odious debt.

In December 2021, the IMF published an internal report admitting that the 2018 bailout completely failed to stabilize Argentina’s economy.

But when Argentina’s center-left President Alberto Fernández entered office in December 2019, his country was ensnared in $44.5 billion in debt from this bailout that the IMF itself admitted was a total failure. ($44.5 billion of the $57.1 billion loan had already been disbursed, and Fernández cancelled the rest.)

The Argentine government has tried to renegotiate the debt, but in order to do so the IMF has imposed conditions that severely restrict the nation’s sovereignty – such as appointing a British economist who “will virtually be the new economic minister,” acting as a kind of “co-government,” warned prominent diplomat Alicia Castro.

Seeking ways around these US debt traps, Fernández decided this February to turn to the two rising Eurasian superpowers.

Argentine President Fernández travels to Russia to meet with Putin

On February 3, Argentine President Alberto Fernández travelled to Russia to meet with President Vladimir Putin.

“I’m certain Argentina has to stop being so dependent on the [International Monetary] Fund and the United States, and has to open up to other places, and that is where it seems to me that Russia has a very important place,” Fernández said, explaining his motivation for the trip.

🇷🇺🇦🇷 | "Estamos dando un paso importante para que la Argentina y Rusia profundicen sus lazos", expresó el presidente @alferdez en una declaración conjunta que brindó junto a su par Vladímir Putin. #GiraPresidencial

📍 @KremlinRussia_Ehttps://t.co/aHl8tOuPZy pic.twitter.com/APoQR6VHtU — Casa Rosada (@CasaRosada) February 3, 2022

Fernández added that, for Russia, Argentina “should be the door to enter” the region, telling Putin, “We could be a venue for the development of your cooperation with Latin American nations.”

The two leaders discussed Russian investment in the Argentine economy, trade, railroad construction, and energy technology.

Fernández also thanked Moscow for collaborating with his country in the production of its Sputnik V covid-19 vaccine. Argentina was the first country in the western hemisphere to do so.

The Argentine president even pointed out in their meeting that he has received three doses of the Sputnik V vaccine. Putin added, “Me too.”

Putin said the two countries agree on many issues, calling Argentina “one of Russia’s key partners in Latin America.”

Es un honor haberme reunido con Vladímir Putin, presidente de Rusia.

Tuvimos la oportunidad de intercambiar ideas sobre cómo podemos complementar mucho más el vínculo entre nuestras naciones. pic.twitter.com/ntmDGn6jtD — Alberto Fernández (@alferdez) February 3, 2022

Argentine President Fernández travels to China to meet with Xi

Just three days after meeting with Putin, President Alberto Fernández travelled to China on February 6 to meet with President Xi Jinping.

In this historic trip, Argentina officially joined Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, a massive global infrastructure program.

Fernández and other top Argentine officials signed agreements for $23.7 billion in Chinese financing, including investments and infrastructure projects.

The funding will be disbursed in two parts: one, which is already approved, will provide Argentina with $14 billion for 10 infrastructure projects; the second, for $9.7 billion, will finance the South American nation’s integration into the Belt and Road.

There are three joint Chinese-Argentine projects that were reportedly at the top of Fernández’s list: creating 5G networks, developing Argentina’s lithium industry, and building the Atucha III nuclear power plant.

Tuve una cordial, amistosa y fructífera reunión con Xi Jinping, presidente de China. Acordamos la incorporación de Argentina a la Franja y la Ruta de la Seda.

Es una excelente noticia. Nuestro país obtendrá más de US$ 23 mil millones de inversiones chinas para obras y proyectos. pic.twitter.com/LGyIJ6zWdG — Alberto Fernández (@alferdez) February 6, 2022

Fernández also discussed plans for Argentina to produce China’s Sinopharm covid-19 vaccine, in addition to Russia’s Sputnik V.

Argentina and China signed a comprehensive memorandum of understanding, including 13 documents for cooperation in areas such as green energy, technology, education, agriculture, communication, and nuclear energy.

Fernández and Xi discussed ways to “strengthen relations of political, commercial, economic, scientific, and cultural cooperation between both countries,” according to an Argentine government readout of the meeting.

The two leaders apparently hit it off very well, with Fernández telling Xi, “If you were Argentine, you would be a Peronist.”

🇨🇳🇦🇷 | El presidente @alferdez mantuvo reuniones sobre el proyecto de producir en Argentina la vacuna de Sinopharm, participó de la inauguración de los JJOO de Invierno #Beijing2022 y visitó el Museo de la Historia del Partido Comunista. #GiraPresidencialhttps://t.co/acSH9rvpM7 pic.twitter.com/Edz7hHRLE8 — Casa Rosada (@CasaRosada) February 4, 2022

Argentina’s incorporation into the Belt and Road comes mere weeks after Nicaragua joined the initiative in January, and Cuba in December.

Latin America’s growing links with China and Russia show how the increasingly multipolar international system offers countries in the Global South new potential allies who can serve as bulwarks against and alternatives to Washington’s hegemony.

While right-wing leaders in Latin America keep looking north to the United States as their political compass, progressive governments are reaching across the ocean to the Eurasian powers of China, Russia, and Iran, building new international alliances that weaken Washington’s geopolitical grip over a region that the US president still insists is its “front yard.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: argentina; bri; china; debt; imf; russia

1 posted on 02/11/2022 8:00:19 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

If only Argentina had stayed with the loving and heroic autobot communist regimes they’d be a land of milk and honey now!


2 posted on 02/11/2022 8:03:37 PM PST by Skywise
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To: Whenifhow; null and void; aragorn; EnigmaticAnomaly; kalee; Kale; azishot; AZ .44 MAG; Baynative; ..

right in our back yard...


3 posted on 02/11/2022 8:08:40 PM PST by bitt ( <img src=' 'width=50%>)
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To: SeekAndFind

Heh, if Argentina thinks they got screwed by the IMF, wait until the BRI sets it’s hooks in her.


4 posted on 02/11/2022 8:26:48 PM PST by thescourged1
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To: SeekAndFind

Their debt to GDP ratio is 102%. Ours is 130%. Russia’s is 19%. The globalists want to get control of nations and load them up with debt. They throw color revolutions and start wars with the ones who won’t play ball.


5 posted on 02/11/2022 8:27:03 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up....)
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To: thescourged1

They won’t get that till China demands the oil or fishing rights around Argentina.


6 posted on 02/11/2022 8:30:11 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up....)
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To: SeekAndFind
---- "Argentina is trapped in odious debt with the US-controlled IMF" So does Benjamin Norton write.

A massive lie. The IMF is headquartered in Washington, but the UN is also within the borders of the US. To assert that the IMF is "US-controlled" when 190 nations participate is not correct. The head of the entity is a Bulgarian currently.

A cursory look at the IMF, its leadership and more shows that the US is NOT in charge. But like the UN, the US kicks in a large share through quotas and that nonsense called "drawing rights."

https://www.imf.org/en/About

As to the article written by Benjamin Norton for Multipolarista, the "About" of the website states "Multipolarista is an independent news outlet documenting the transition to a multipolar world. Multipolarista is edited by journalist Benjamin Norton."

The website was registered on 2022-01-21, according to whois.com, and "privacy guarded" by a firm in Arizona. No other staff are listed except for the article's author and editor of the website.A five minute look through the various articles shows that Benjamin Norton writes most of them himself. A small news operation indeed. No office address showing a location is available on the site.

One finds Ben (Benjamin) Norton other ways. "Ben Norton is a journalist, writer, and filmmaker. He is the assistant editor of The Grayzone, and the producer of the Moderate Rebels podcast, which he co-hosts with editor Max Blumenthal. His website is BenNorton.com and he tweets at @BenjaminNorton." So says The Grayzone.

Of himself, he writes: "He was formerly a reporter with the investigative journalism website The Grayzone, and previously produced the political podcast and video show Moderate Rebels. Before that, Ben was a politics staff writer and reporter for Salon and AlterNet, a contributor to the media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), and a producer and reporter for The Real News. He has freelanced for a variety of other publications, such as The Intercept."

As to being 'trapped in odious debt," Ben Norton fails to observe that the US is "trapped in odious debt," but then to a hard Leftist, that's the breaks.

Argentina's odious debt? $44,000,000.00.

The USA's odious debt? $30,000,000,000,000.00.

To the committed Leftist, numbers are hard.

7 posted on 02/11/2022 10:20:14 PM PST by Worldtraveler once upon a time
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To: Skywise

This is why the investment banking cartel are waging a propaganda war against China.


8 posted on 02/11/2022 10:44:32 PM PST by Yollopoliuhqui
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To: SeekAndFind

Goebbels couldn’t have written a better piece of propaganda.

CC


9 posted on 02/12/2022 1:30:33 AM PST by Celtic Conservative (My cats are more amusing than 200 channels worth of TV.)
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To: thescourged1

It’s a short term gain for Argentina - and a long term ‘total loss’. The exact paradigm of every addiction.

Surely we must have someone in ‘intelligence’ who is aware of this pattern? Right?


10 posted on 02/12/2022 9:55:23 AM PST by GOPJ (Trudeau and Washington 'Elites' willl destory both economies to 'boot trucker's faces'.. eff 'em.)
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