Rules, regs to be integrated without congressional review
By Jerome R. Corsi
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, President Bush and European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso at a White House summit meeting last
April where they launched the Transatlantic Economic Council
Six U.S. senators and 49 House members are advisers for a group working
toward a Transatlantic Common Market between the U.S. and the European
Union by 2015.
The Transatlantic Policy Network – a non-governmental organization
headquartered in Washington and Brussels – is advised by the
bi-partisan congressional TPN policy group, chaired by Sen. Robert
Bennett, R-Utah.
The plan – currently being implemented by the Bush administration with
the formation of the Transatlantic Economic Council in April 2007 –
appears to be following a plan written in 1939 by a world-government
advocate who sought to create a Transatlantic Union as an international
governing body.
An economist from the World Bank has argued in print that the formation
of the Transatlantic Common Market is designed to follow the blueprint
of Jean Monnet, a key intellectual architect of the European Union,
recognizing that economic integration must inevitably lead to political
integration.
As WND previously reported, a key step in advancing this goal was the
creation of the Transatlantic Economic Council by the U.S. and the EU
through an agreement signed by President Bush, German Chancellor Angela
Merkel – the current president of the European Council – and European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso at a White House summit
meeting last April.
Writing in the Fall 2007 issue of the Streit Council journal "Freedom
and Union," Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., a member of the TPN advisory
group, affirmed the target date of 2015 for the creation of a
Transatlantic Common Market.
Costa said the Transatlantic Economic Council is tasked with creating
the Transatlantic Common Market regulatory infrastructure. The
infrastructure would not require congressional approval, like a new
free-trade agreement would.
Writing in the same issue of the Streit Council publication, Bennett
also confirmed that what has become known as the "Merkel initiative"
would allow the Transatlantic Economic Council to integrate and
harmonize administrative rules and regulations between the U.S. and the
EU "in a very quiet way," without introducing a new free trade
agreement to Congress.
Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah
No document on the TEC website suggests that any of the regulatory
changes resulting from the process of integrating with the EU will be
posted in the Federal Register or submitted to Congress as new
free-trade agreements or as modifications to existing trade agreements.
In addition to Bennett, the advisers to the Transatlantic Policy
Network includes the following senators: Thad Cochran, R-Miss.; Chuck
Hagel, R-Neb.; Barbara Mikulski, D-Md.; Pat Roberts, R-Kan.; and Gordon
Smith, R-Ore.
Among the 49 U.S. congressmen on the TPN's Congressional Group are John
Boehner, R-Ohio; John Dingell, D-Mich.; Kenny Marchant, R-Texas; and F.
James Sensenbrenner, R-Wisc.
WND contacted Bennett's office for comment but received no return call
by the publication deadline.
A progress report on the TEC website indicates the following U.S.
government agencies are already at work integrating and harmonizing
administrative rules and regulations with their EU counterparts: The
Office of Management and Budget, the Food and Drug Administration, the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A step toward world government
The Streit Council is named after Clarence K. Streit, whose 1939 book
"Union Now" called for the creation of a Transatlantic Union as a step
toward world government. The new federation, with an international
constitution, was to include the 15 democracies of U.S., UK, France,
Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Ireland,
New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and South Africa.
Ira Straus, the founder and U.S. coordinator of the Committee on
Eastern Europe and Russia in NATO, a group dedicated to including
Russia within NATO, credits Bennett as TPN chairperson with reviving
Streit's work "seven decades later."
A globalist with leftist political leanings, Straus was a Fulbright
professor of political science at Moscow State University and the
Moscow State Institute of International Relations from 2001 to 2002.
The congruity of ideas between Bennett and Streit is clear when Bennett
writes passages that echo precisely goals Streit stated in 1939.
One example is Bennett's claim in his Streit Council article that
creating a Transatlantic Common Market would combine markets that
comprise 60 percent of world Gross Domestic Product under a common
regulatory standard that would become "the de facto world standard,
regardless of what any other parties say."
Similarly, Streit wrote in "Union Now" that the economic power of the
15 democracies he sought to combine in a Transatlantic Union would be
overwhelming in their economic power and a clear challenge to the
authoritarian states then represented by Nazi Germany and the communist
Soviet Union.
Also writing in the Fall 2007 issue of the Streit Council journal
"Freedom and Union," World Bank economist Domenec Ruiz Devesa openly
acknowledged that "transatlantic economic integration, though important
in itself, is not the end."
"As understood by Jean Monnet," he continued, "economic integration
must and will lead to political integration, since an integrated market
requires common institutions producing common rules to govern it."
Transatlantic Common Market by 2015
Last February, the Transatlantic Policy Network formed a Transatlantic
Market Implementation Group to put in place "a roadmap and framework"
to direct the activity of the Transatlantic Economic Council to achieve
the creation of the Transatlantic Common Market by 2015.
The Transatlantic Economic Council is an official international
governmental body established by executive fiat in the U.S. and the EU
without congressional approval or oversight. No new law or treaty was
sought by the Bush administration to approve or implement the plan to
create a Transatlantic Common Market.
The U.S. congressmen and senators are involved only indirectly, as
advisers to the influential non-governmental organization.
In a February 2007 document entitled "Completing the Transatlantic
Market," the TPN's Transatlantic Market Implementation Group writes,
"The aim of this roadmap and framework would be to remove barriers to
trade and investment across the Atlantic and to reduce regulatory
compliance costs."
The document further acknowledged the impact the Transatlantic Common
Market agenda would have on U.S. and European legislators: "The roadmap
and framework will necessarily oblige legislative and regulatory
authorities in both Europe and the United States to take into
consideration from the outset the impact their acts may have on
transatlantic economic relations and to ensure that their respective
governmental bodies involved have the necessary budgetary and
organizational resources to work closely with each other."
Clinton administration roots
The work to create a Transatlantic Common Market can be traced back to
the Clinton administration's decision to join in the 1995 New
Transatlantic Agenda with the European Commission.
Today, the website of the Transatlantic Economic Council openly
proclaims the TEC is "a political body to oversee and accelerate
government-to-government integration between the European Union and the
United States of America."
The first meeting of the TEC was held Nov. 9 in Washington, D.C., and
the next meeting is scheduled for June.
A joint statement issued at the Nov. 9 meeting specified progress was
being made "in removing barriers to trade and investment and in easing
regulatory burdens" in a wide range of policy areas, including drugs
and disease control, the importation into the EU of U.S. poultry
treated with pathogen reduction treatments, federal communication
commissions allowing suppliers to create declarations of conformity for
products, uniform standards for electrical products and agreements on
standards for pure biofuels.
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