Bush's SPP power grab sets stage for military to manage flu threats
By Jerome R. Corsi
David Nabarro is new U.N. system influenza coordinator
The Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America summit in
Canada released a plan that established U.N. law along with regulations
by the World Trade Organization and World Health Organization as
supreme over U.S. law and set the stage for militarizing the management
of continental health emergencies.
The "North American Plan for Avian & Pandemic Influenza" was
finalized at the SPP summit last week in Montebello, Quebec.
At the same time, the U.S. Northern Command, or NORTHCOM, has created a
webpage dedicated to avian flu and has been running exercises in
preparation for the possible use of U.S. military forces in a
continental domestic emergency involving avian flu or pandemic
influenza.
With virtually no media attention, in 2005 President Bush shifted U.S.
policy on avian flu and pandemic influenza, placing the country under
international guidelines not specifically determined by domestic
agencies.
The policy shift was formalized Sept. 14, 2005, when Bush announced a
new International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza to a
High-Level Plenary Meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, in New York.
The new International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza was
designed to supersede an earlier November 2005 Homeland Security report
that called for a U.S. national strategy that would be coordinated by
the Departments of Homeland Security, Health and Agriculture.
The 2005 plan, operative until Bush announced the International
Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza, directed the State
Department to work with the WHO and U.N., but it does not mention that
international health controls are to be considered controlling over
relevant U.S. statutes or authorities.
Under the International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza,
Bush agreed the U.S. would work through the U.N. system influenza
coordinator to develop a continental emergency response plan operating
through authorities under the WTO, North American Free Trade Agreement
and the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
WND could find no evidence the Bush administration presented the
Influenza Partnership plan to Congress for oversight or approval.
The SPP plan for avian and pandemic influenza announced at the Canadian
summit last week embraces the international control principles Bush
first announced to the U.N. in his 2005 International Partnership on
Avian and Pandemic Influenza declaration.
The SPP plan gives primacy for avian and pandemic influenza management
to plans developed by the WHO, WTO, U.N. and NAFTA directives – not
decisions made by U.S. agencies.
The U.N.-WHO-WTO-NAFTA plan advanced by SPP features a prominent role
for the U.N. system influenza coordinator as a central international
director in the case of a North American avian flu or pandemic
influenza outbreak.
In Sept. 2005, Dr. David Nabarro was appointed the first U.N. system
influenza coordinator, a position which also places him as a senior
policy adviser to the U.N. director-general.
Nabarro joined the WHO in 1999 and was appointed WHO executive director
of sustainable development and health environments in July 2002.
In a Sept. 29, 2005, press conference at the U.N., Nabarro made clear
that his job was to prepare for the H5N1 virus, known as the avian flu.
Nabarro fueled the global fear that an epidemic was virtually
inevitable.
In response to a question about the 1918-1919 flu pandemic that killed
approximately 40 million people worldwide, Nabarro commented, "I am
certain there will be another pandemic sometime."
Nabarro stressed at the press conference that he saw as inevitable a
worldwide pandemic influenza coming soon that would kill millions.
He quantified the deaths he expected as follows: "I'm not, at the
moment at liberty to give you a prediction on numbers, but I just want
to stress, that, let's say, the range of deaths could be anything from
5 to 150 million."
In a March 8, 2006, U.N. press conference that was reported on a State
Department website, Nabarro predicted an outbreak of the H5N1 virus
would "reach the Americas within the next six to 12 months."
On Feb. 1, 2006, NORTHCOM hosted representatives of more than 40
international, federal and state agencies for "an exercise designed to
provoke discussion and determine what governmental actions, including
military support, would be necessary in the event of an influenza
pandemic in the United States."
NORTHCOM and other governmental websites document the growing role the
Bush administration plans for the U.S. military to be involved in
continental domestic emergencies involving health, including avian flu
and pandemic influenza.
NORTHCOM participated in a nationwide Joint Chiefs of Staff-directed
exercise – code-named Exercise Ardent Sentry 06 – to rehearse
cooperation between Department of Defense and local, state and federal
agencies, as well as the Canadian government.
A pandemic influenza crisis was one of the four scenarios gamed in
Exercise Ardent Sentry 06, involving a scenario of a plague in Mexico
reaching across the border into Arizona and New Mexico.
As has been customary in SPP documents and declarations, the
Montebello, Canada, announcement of the North American Plan for Avian
& Pandemic Influenza acknowledges in passing the sovereignty of the
three nations.
The announcement says, "The Plan is not intended to replace existing
arrangements or agreements. As such, each country's laws are to be
respected and this Plan is to be subordinate and complementary to
domestic response plans, existing arrangements and bilateral or
multilateral agreements."
Still, the SPP plan argues the risk from avian and pandemic influenza
was so great to North America that the leaders of the three nations
were compelled "to work collectively and with all levels of government,
the private sector and among-non-governmental organizations to combat
avian and pandemic influenza."
Moreover, the SPP plan openly acknowledges, "The WHO's international
guidance formed much of the basis for the three countries' planning for
North American preparedness and response."
WND previously reported NORTHCOM has been established with a command
center at Peterson Air Force Base, tasked with using the U.S. military
in continental domestic emergency situations.
WND also has reported President Bush signed in May two documents,
National Security Presidential Directive-51 and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive-20, which give the office of the president
extraordinary powers to declare national emergencies and to assume
near-dictatorial powers.
Following the Montebello summit last week, the SPP North American Plan
for Avian & Pandemic Influenza was published on a made-over SPP
homepage redesigned to feature agreements newly reached by trilateral
bureaucratic working groups.
Original
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U.S. under U.N. law in health emergency
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