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Bush Administration Quietly Plans NAFTA Super Highway
Jerome R. Corsi / Human Events | June 14 2006
Quietly but systematically, the Bush Administration is advancing the plan to build a huge NAFTA Super Highway, four football-fields-wide, through the heart of the U.S. along Interstate 35, from the Mexican border at Laredo, Tex., to the Canadian border north of Duluth, Minn.
Once complete, the new road will allow containers from the Far East to enter the United States through the Mexican port of Lazaro Cardenas, bypassing the Longshoreman’s Union in the process. The Mexican trucks, without the involvement of the Teamsters Union, will drive on what will be the nation’s most modern highway straight into the heart of America. The Mexican trucks will cross border in FAST lanes, checked only electronically by the new “SENTRI” system. The first customs stop will be a Mexican customs office in Kansas City, their new Smart Port complex, a facility being built for Mexico at a cost of $3 million to the U.S. taxpayers in Kansas City.
As incredible as this plan may seem to some readers, the first Trans-Texas Corridor segment of the NAFTA Super Highway is ready to begin construction next year. Various U.S. government agencies, dozens of state agencies, and scores of private NGOs (non-governmental organizations) have been working behind the scenes to create the NAFTA Super Highway, despite the lack of comment on the plan by President Bush. The American public is largely asleep to this key piece of the coming “North American Union” that government planners in the new trilateral region of United States, Canada and Mexico are about to drive into reality.
Just examine the following websites to get a feel for the magnitude of NAFTA Super Highway planning that has been going on without any new congressional legislation directly authorizing the construction of the planned international corridor through the center of the country.
NASCO, the North America SuperCorridor Coalition Inc., is a “non-profit organization dedicated to developing the world’s first international, integrated and secure, multi-modal transportation system along the International Mid-Continent Trade and Transportation Corridor to improve both the trade competitiveness and quality of life in North America.” Where does that sentence say anything about the USA? Still, NASCO has received $2.5 million in earmarks from the U.S. Department of Transportation to plan the NAFTA Super Highway as a 10-lane limited-access road (five lanes in each direction) plus passenger and freight rail lines running alongside pipelines laid for oil and natural gas. One glance at the map of the NAFTA Super Highway on the front page of the NASCO website will make clear that the design is to connect Mexico, Canada, and the U.S. into one transportation system.
Kansas City SmartPort Inc. is an “investor based organization supported
by the public and private sector” to create the key hub on the NAFTA
Super Highway. At the Kansas City SmartPort, the containers from the Far
East can be transferred to trucks going east and west, dramatically reducing
the ground transportation time dropping the containers off in Los Angeles
or Long Beach involves for most of the country. A brochure on the SmartPort
website describes the plan in glowing terms: “For those who live in
Kansas City, the idea of receiving containers nonstop from the Far East
by way of Mexico may sound unlikely, but later this month that seemingly
far-fetched notion will become a reality.”
The U.S. government has housed within the Department of Commerce (DOC) an
“SPP office” that is dedicated to organizing the many working
groups laboring within the executive branches of the U.S., Mexico and Canada
to create the regulatory reality for the Security and Prosperity Partnership.
The SPP agreement was signed by Bush, President Vicente Fox, and then-Prime
Minister Paul Martin in Waco, Tex., on March 23, 2005. According to the
DOC website, a U.S.-Mexico Joint Working Committee on Transportation Planning
has finalized a plan such that “(m)ethods for detecting bottlenecks
on the U.S.-Mexico border will be developed and low cost/high impact projects
identified in bottleneck studies will be constructed or implemented.”
The report notes that new SENTRI travel lanes on the Mexican border will
be constructed this year. The border at Laredo should be reduced to an electronic
speed bump for the Mexican trucks containing goods from the Far East to
enter the U.S. on their way to the Kansas City SmartPort.
The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is overseeing the Trans-Texas
Corridor (TTC) as the first leg of the NAFTA Super Highway. A 4,000-page
environmental impact statement has already been completed and public hearings
are scheduled for five weeks, beginning next month, in July 2006. The billions
involved will be provided by a foreign company, Cintra Concessions de Infraestructuras
de Transporte, S.A. of Spain. As a consequence, the TTC will be privately
operated, leased to the Cintra consortium to be operated as a toll-road.
The details of the NAFTA Super Highway are hidden in plan view. Still, Bush
has not given speeches to bring the NAFTA Super Highway plans to the full
attention of the American public. Missing in the move toward creating a
North American Union is the robust public debate that preceded the decision
to form the European Union. All this may be for calculated political reasons
on the part of the Bush Administration.
A good reason Bush does not want to secure the
border with Mexico may be that the administration is trying to create express
lanes for Mexican trucks to bring containers with cheap Far East goods into
the heart of the U.S., all without the involvement of any U.S. union workers
on the docks or in the trucks.
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