Blake Hounshell highlights a tidbit from Henry Paulson's new memoir that caught my attention as well.  According to Paulson, in the summer of 2008 Russia approached China to sell off their Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt.  This merited stories from Bloomberg and the Financial Times.  According to the FT:

Russia proposed to China that the two nations should sell Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds in 2008 to force the US government to bail out the giant mortgage-finance companies, former US Treasury secretary Hank Paulson has claimed....

Mr Paulson said that he was told about the Russian plan when he was in Beijing for the Olympics in August 2008. Russia had gone to war with Georgia, a US ally, on August 8.

“Russian officials had made a top-level approach to the Chinese, suggesting that together they might sell big chunks of their GSE holdings to force the US to use its emergency authorities to prop up these companies,” he said.

Fannie and Freddie are known as GSEs or government sponsored enterprises.

“The Chinese had declined to go along with the disruptive scheme, but the report was deeply troubling,” he said. A senior Russian official told the Financial Times that he could not comment on the allegation.

The Russians deny the story in the Bloomberg story, but Ashby Monk points out the possible implications

Paulson’s report is pretty amazing. If true, it would appear that Russia was plotting economic warfare against the US during the summer of 2008; I don’t really know what else to call it. Their intention was to use their sovereign wealth to purposely weaken and damage the US economy. The fact that all this apparently occurred around the same time that Russia was engaged in a traditional war with Georgia, a US ally, lends some credibility to the idea.

This revelation–while unconfirmed–will not comfort those in the West that fear SWFs; it doesn’t help anybody if these funds are seen to be potential weapons of economic destruction…

Let's assume this is true for the sake of making life interesting.  There's still a few more pieces of data I'd like to have before drawing conclusions. 

Monk assumes that the Russians did this for geopoltical reasons. If memory serves, however, China and Russia were both concerned about protecting the value of their GSE debt.  Forcing the U.S. government to intervene would have helped protect their remaining holdings.  So this might have been an entirely commercial gambit. 

Second, this really isn't about sovereign wealth funds per se but about official holdings of U.S. debt and equities.  Some people think this is a real problem -- others don't.  Readers should provide their thoughts in the comments.

Third, the fact that the Russians thought the Chinese would go along with them on this says a lot about the delusions Russian leaders had during the Russian-Georgian conflict.  They really seem to have believed that China, other members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and the rest of the Collective Security Treaty Organization  would be perfectly cool with Russia recognizing the independence of two secessionist states -- just because it would be an affront to the U.S.A.  Whoops.

This raises my provocative but closing point -- that the Russian-Georgian war might have been the best thing that could have happened for the bilateral relationship.  Despite all the doomsaying at the time, the conflict -- combined with Great Recession -- had a modest humbling effect on Russian ambitions.  The commodity bubble - which had fuelled Russia's economic growth and self-confidence for the past decade - popped in the summer of 2008.  The recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia abetted a capital outflow that had begun in reaction to the Russian government's heavy-handedness in picking winners and losers in the domestic economy.  These trends, if nothing else, likely highlighted the opportunity costs of continued bellicosity to Russian elites and Russian policymakers. 

At the same time, the invasion itself provided a moment of clarity to U.S. policymakers about the precise limits of their influence when dealing with balky republics in the Caucasus.  Even as a candidate, Obama articulated a "realist internationalist" position towards the Russian Federation.  This approach recognizes Russia's great power status and the utility of a great power concert in dealing with global trouble spots.  Rather than prioritizing human rights, democratization, or even economic interests in the bilateral relationship, this policy position prioritizes great power cooperation on matters of high politics, such as nuclear nonproliferation and the containment of rogue states that transgress global norms.

You can argue about the priorities, but on the whole I think this policy has worked.  The war allowed both sides to confront the costs of continuing down a very negative trajectory.  They both stepped away from the brink.

This is worth thinking about whem mulling over a different bilateral relationship that's had a bad few months.

 
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GRANT

2:17 PM ET

February 1, 2010

If an effort to harm the

If an effort to harm the United States, it's an unusual one and would have been a poor reading of the U.S. The Georgian war we could stay out of, we complained of course but we could stay out of it. If Russia did something that damaged the American economy (or if we even suspected it) that would be pushing it too far.

 

APPRXAM

4:20 AM ET

February 2, 2010

Here's what would've worked

If Russia really wanted to hurt the United States economy. they could've tricked American insurance companies into taking bets from banks to hedge against financial products that only the banks knew the worth of and then....after all of that stupidity.....sold the stocks to the American people or as I like to call it (Governmental interferance of Rich people taking changes) No risk tp risk taking bankers.

If this is illegal, then we should invade Russia, but only after we invade Wall Fleece.

 

BLUE13326

3:43 PM ET

February 1, 2010

Close, but it was really

Close, but it was really about the price of oil; if you recall, that summer it hit $140 level and there was talk from the masters of the universe at Goldman that $200 was next. I'd say Russia achieved most, if not all, of its strategic objectives in the Georgian war (and the immenent flipping of Ukraine is a nice bonus), and that the fall of the price of oil is what really gave them whatever caution they have now.

 

BLUE13326

3:45 PM ET

February 1, 2010

OK, I didnt read your full

OK, I didnt read your full post, so my comment pretty much just reiterated what you went on to say.

That'll teach me...

 

SURESH SHETH

5:39 PM ET

February 1, 2010

China's refusal to team up with Russia

US can not afford to take much solace from China’s refusal to team up with Russia to protect their GSE debt. China wants to occupy the sole super power status in the world like that of US for last 20 years or so and does not want to share it with Russia.

As far as GSE debt is concerned, China has No problem keep investing in US governmental debt since she needs to park her huge forex reserves somewhere anyway. As such China’s forex reserves are expected to double to five trillion dollars over next five years. China would be more than glad to become the majority owner of US treasury debt crowding out everyone else, which will give China enormous influence over US economic and foreign policies anyway.

China’s rise to super power status at such a rapid pace was made possible by Nixon’s embrace of China’s Communist dragon to counter Russia’s Soviet bear in 1972.

Afterall China was a pariah country in the world just like today’s North Korea until anti-Communist Nixon’s 1972 visit during the height of Mao‘s cultural revolution that was killing millions of Chinese. All the West European and East Asian countries stayed away from China following the US lead until 1972 and embraced China after Nixon’s visit. While US would not give MFN status to Soviet Union (remember Jackson-Vanik amendment?) unless Russia shed Communism, it had no problem giving it to China’s Communist dictators with a capitalist mask. Trade with China expanded by leaps and bounds during 12 years of Republican rule beginning in 1981. Bush Senior had NO problem sending his national security advisor to Beijing within two months of Beijing massacre in 1989. After campaigning against butchers of Beijing in 1992 elections, even Bill Clinton became enthusiastic supporter of trade with China once he took lessons in foreign policy from Nixon in early 1993 during a special Whitehouse-arranged meeting. US also promoted China to a super power status by accepting it as a permanent UNSC member.

It behooves China to erect a statue of anti-communist Nixon right next to die-hard communist Mao in Beijing for making China’s rise as super power possible.

 

APPRXAM

4:13 AM ET

February 2, 2010

Really?

If true, who the hell would be shocked?

I have to question the motives of the Chinese and of our asteem former Tres. Sec in the first place.

I'm trying to figure out if any such tactic is a violation of International Law and what would we do about it anyway, because I"m almost certain we'd do nothing like, I don't know, STOP SELLING GSE to countries that are currently and historically hostle to the interest of the United States.

But really....we have to ask ourselves....do we really need to do business like this?

 

Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

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