By Jerome R. Corsi
The U.S. has built nine navigation systems for Mexico and Canada under
the controversial Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America
in an apparent first step toward establishing the satellite
infrastructure needed to create a North American air traffic control
system.
The defining vision for North American air traffic control was
articulated by then-Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta in a
Sept. 27, 2004, statement announcing, "We must make flying throughout
North America as seamless as possible if we are to truly reap the
rewards of the expanding global economy."
Wide Area Augmentation System
The "2006 Report to Leaders" posted on the SPP website proclaimed, "In
order to increase navigational accuracy across the region, five Wide
Area Augmentation System (WAAS) stations were installed in Canada and
Mexico in 2005."
WAAS is a space-based augmentation system that provides precision
navigation information to aircraft equipped with Global Positioning
Satellite/WAAS receivers through all phases of flight.
Working through the North American Aviation Trilateral, the U.S. has
built for Mexico WAAS stations at five locations: Mexico City, San Jose
del Cabo, Puerto Vallarta, Merida and Tapachula.
Additionally, the U.S., working through NATT, has built four Canadian
WAAS stations, at Iqaluit, Gander, Winnipeg and Goose Bay.
WND also has learned discussions are underway to create a North
American Air Traffic Control System, complete with Federal Aviation
Administration issuance of WAAS certifications for Canadian and Mexican
airspace. According to a government official who specializes in
satellite technology applied to air traffic control systems, it would
involve Canadian and Mexican foreign nationals not only hosting but
operating and maintaining U.S. air navigation equipment as part of a
continental Global Navigation Satellite System.
The vision would permit Mexican and Canadian air traffic controllers to
operate within North American airspace as if they simply were operating
from a U.S. city.
The core of the U.S. air traffic control system is the Global
Positioning Satellite system that functions as an integral part of the
seamless Global Navigation Satellite System envisioned by the
International Civil Aviation Organization.
A new program in development, Automatic Dependent
Surveillance-Broadcast, or ADSB, will eventually replace existing radar
sites to incorporate WAAS navigation signals and report aircraft
location to air traffic control.
The plan is to feed ADSB information on all participating aircraft to
Mexican and Canadian air traffic control.
WAAS uses a network of ground reference systems – Wide-Area Reference
Systems – to establish accurate vertical and horizontal identification
of aircraft location to assist air traffic controllers in precisely
managing air space, including the ability to space aircraft accurately
in take-off and landing, as well as while en route from location to
location.
'Remove the barriers'
FAA and SPP-affiliated government officials deny any intent to
integrate Mexican or Canadian airlines into the domestic structure of
U.S. air travel, emphasizing instead the need to facilitate
international travel between the three countries and coordinate air
traffic control for U.S. airlines needing to fly into or over Mexican
or Canadian airspace.
Their position is reflected in Secretary of Transportation Mary Peter's
statement at the first North American Transportation Trilateral meeting
with her counterpart transportation ministers in Mexico and Canada in
Tucson, Ariz., on April 27.
Peters said, "I look forward to the day when it is as easy for an
airline to start new service between Tucson and Montreal or Monterrey
as it is between Tucson and Austin."
Knowledgeable government sources tell WND on background that the vision
of a North American seamless airspace is also designed to permit
Mexican and Canadian airlines in the future to operate from within
domestic U.S. air terminals, serving locations within the U.S. on a
competitive basis with U.S.-domiciled airlines.
The FAA projects continent-wide full development of an operational
GPS-WAAS system by 2013.
Peters announced at the April 27 meeting that, "With globalization
intensifying the pressures on all our economies, it has never been more
important to connect these networks, coordinate our policies, and
remove the barriers that keep large and growing volumes of goods and
travelers from moving efficiently across our borders. In the United
States, we see the opportunities in aviation as especially promising."
At the NATT meeting, which went virtually unreported in the U.S.
mainstream media, Peters said the 2005 air services agreement between
the United States and Mexico and the Open Skies accord signed with
Canada in March lift restrictions on continental travel to provide for
"free and open trans-border air travel."
Globally, the vision is to integrate a North American GPS/WAAS system
with the Ground-Based Augmentation System being established by
EUROCONTROL, an agency established under the auspices of the European
Union to manage EU airspace.
Airservices Australian, an Australian airspace management organization,
also intends to leverage the FAA investment in GBAS technology to
advance what ultimately will become a world-standard satellite-based
airspace navigation system.
The FAA website documents that a CAN/MEX/USA working group held its
first meeting in Mérida, Mexico, in June 1995, during the Clinton
administration.
The CAN/MEX/USA working group can further be traced to October 1993,
when the International Civil Aviation Organization completed its Global
Communications, Navigation and Surveillance/Air Traffic Management
Implementation and Transition Plan.
In an FAA webpage reserved for discussing international activities, the
FAA says the activities organized under the North American Aviation
Trilateral reaffirm the FAA goal to establish regional cooperation for
seamless air navigation in North America, consistent with the vision
articulated by Mineta and SPP.
Original Source
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