WASHINGTON – There are mixed signals coming from Mexico about the fate
of a proposed mega-port in Baja California for mainly Chinese goods
that would be shipped on rail lines and "NAFTA superhighways" running
through the U.S. to Canada
The port at Punta Colonet, planned as a major container facility to
transfer Asian goods into America's heartland, got at least a temporary
setback when a Mexican businessman announced a competing project in
which he was seeking to secure mineral rights in the area.
Gabriel Chavez, originally one of the principal movers behind the port
plan, now says there are significant amounts of titanium and iron to be
mined offshore – a project he considers more important than the port.
Mexican ports czar Cesar Patricio Reyes placed a moratorium on further
work toward port planning for three or four months while the government
explores ways to make everyone happy.
It is no secret the Mexican government is still committed to the port
plan. A map from the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies shows the
proposed goods route into a North American community.
According to transportation officials in Arizona, one of the sites
considered for a rail line from Punta Colonet, the Mexican government
has released an official directive stating its intention to create a
new marine facility there -- about 150 miles south of the U.S. border.
The port at Punta Colonet, when completed, is expected to rival the
biggest West Coast ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach, both heavily
congested now.
Bringing goods into a Mexican port would mean lower costs for foreign
shippers because of cheaper labor and less restrictive environmental
regulations.
Hutchison Ports Mexico, a subsidiary of the Chinese company Hutchison
Whampoa Ltd., is keeping reports about progress on the venture close to
the vest.
Only recently has the port become a source of controversy in the U.S.
as Americans begin questioning highway and rail projects criss-crossing
the country – many of which are designed to carry product from Mexico
to the U.S. and Canada on the so-called "NAFTA superhighways."
Resentment is building inside the U.S. because of what appear to be
secretive plans made outside normal government policymaking channels
about immigration, border policies, transportation and integration of
the three North American nations.
Transportation Secretary Maria Cino has promised to release plans
within months for a one-year, NAFTA pilot program permitting Mexican
truckers beyond the limited commercial zone to which they are currently
restricted.
The program will likely involve about 100 Mexican trucking companies,
the Department of Transportation says.
Under the North American Free Trade Agreement – NAFTA – the borders
were to open partially to truckers from both countries in 1995. Full
access was promised by 2000. Because of the restrictions on Mexican
trucks, the Mexican government has imposed limits on U.S. truckers.
The U.S. restrictions were placed by the Clinton administration in
response to demands from the Teamsters union, which said Mexican trucks
posed safety and environmental risks. Currently, the U.S. permits
Mexican truckers only in commercial zones close to the border that
extend no further than 20 miles from Mexico.
While the American Trucking Association supports opening the border,
other unions have joined in opposition with the Teamsters. The
Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association came out this month in
opposition to any Mexican truck pilot program.
Todd Spencer, the association's executive vice president, said the
program would jeopardize safety on U.S. roads and would lead to an
influx of cheap Mexican labor.
"A move by the U.S. Department of Transportation to open U.S. roadways
to Mexican trucks puts the interest of foreign trade and cheap labor
ahead of everything else, including highway safety, homeland security
and the well being of hardworking Americans," Spencer said.
In a letter to the Interstate Trade Commission, Spencer wrote: "The net
effect of admission of Mexican trucks into the U.S. marketplace would
undoubtedly be negative. The supposed benefits to consumers from
speculative reductions in shipping rates would be offset by the
societal costs that are difficult to measure, but are easy to
identify."
Raising more suspicions that such plans are leading to a future
integration of the U.S., Canada and Mexico, a high-level, top-secret
meeting of the North American Forum took place this month in Banff –
with topics ranging from "A Vision for North America," "Opportunities
for Security Cooperation" and "Demographic and Social Dimensions of
North American Integration."
Despite "confirmed" participants including Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, former Secretary of State George Shultz, former Central
Intelligence Agency Director R. James Woolsey, former Immigration and
Naturalization Services Director Doris Meissner, North American Union
guru Robert Pastor, former Defense Secretary William Perry, former
Energy Secretary and Defense Secretary James Schlesinger and top
officials of both Mexico and Canada, there has been no press coverage
of the event. The only media member scheduled to appear at the event,
according to documents obtained by WND, was the Wall Street Journal's
Mary Anastasia O'Grady.
The event was organized by the Canadian Council of Chief Executives and
the Canada West Foundation, an Alberta think-tank that promotes closer
economic integration with the United States.
The Canadian event is just the latest of a series of meetings, policy
papers and directives that have citizens, officials and members of the
media wondering whether these efforts represent some sort of
coordinated effort to implement a "merger" some have characterized as
"NAFTA on steroids."
Last week, government documents released by a Freedom of Information
Act request revealed the Bush administration is running what some
observers see as a "shadow government" with Mexico and Canada in which
the U.S. is crafting a broad range of policy in conjunction with its
neighbors to the north and south.
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