Russia Leads Shift Away From USD With Crypto Oil Trades
Russia's adoption of cryptocurrencies for oil trade is the latest move by nations seeking to bypass USD-based global payment systems. For decades, economic interdependence was seen as the foundation of global stability and peace. The idea was that nations relying on each other for trade and finance were less likely to engage in conflict. This doctrine shaped the post-war global economy, where deep financial and trade linkages were viewed as both efficient and a safeguard for peace.
However, this worldview is changing. In today’s multipolar reality, nations are realizing that interdependence can be a vulnerability and even a national security risk. The U.S. has historically leveraged SWIFT, correspondent banking networks, and dollar liquidity to enforce foreign policy. Sanctions and financial restrictions became tools of influence. But this dominance has backfired, forcing other nations to develop alternative systems.
Russia is now using Bitcoin and Ether to settle oil trades. BRICS nations are building alternative payment rails. China’s CIPS system is bypassing SWIFT, and major energy producers are moving away from the dollar in favor of local currencies and digital assets. Major energy producers, including the UAE and India, are shifting away from the dollar in favor of local currencies and crypto.
“The dollar-based monetary order is already being challenged in multiple ways,” notes Zoltan Pozsar, emphasizing how U.S. policies are pushing countries to create independent payment networks. Even traditional U.S. allies are reconsidering their dependence. Germany’s Friedrich Merz recently stated the need to “step by step” achieve financial independence from the U.S.. Meanwhile, Eurogroup President Paschal Donohoe has promoted a digital euro as Europe’s “clear path” to reducing dollar reliance.
This shift isn’t just geopolitical—it’s technological. Blockchain-based financial networks are making centralized control obsolete. Crypto and stablecoins enable instant, borderless transactions outside of traditional banking systems. Tokenized reserves and digital assets allow trade without dollar-based intermediaries. Decentralized finance offers an alternative source of liquidity, shifting financial power away from government-controlled institutions. The ability to restrict financial access is slipping away.
Crypto in oil trades, BRICS’ financial shift, and China’s payment expansion aren’t isolated events—they signal the decline of U.S. payment control and the emergence of a decentralized, multipolar global order. Washington’s influence won’t vanish overnight, but its ability to dictate global transactions is weakening. The world is shifting toward a system where payments increasingly occur on neutral, distributed networks—beyond the control of any central authority or government. The ability to weaponize payments is diminishing, which may be a positive shift in an era where it is increasingly difficult to predict where nations will align in the future.
For decades, controlling payments was a powerful weapon. Today, it’s a fading relic. The world is moving on. The question is: Who will adapt—and who will be left fighting yesterday’s war?




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