PREMEDITATED MERGER North American union plan headed to Congress in
fall Powerful think
tank prepares report on benefits of integration between U.S., Mexico,
Canada Posted: May 24, 2007 1:00
a.m. Eastern © 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
WASHINGTON A powerful think tank chaired by
former Sen. Sam Nunn and guided by trustees including Richard Armitage,
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Harold Brown, William Cohen and Henry Kissinger, is in the
final stages of preparing a report to the White House and U.S. Congress on the
benefits of integrating the U.S., Mexico and Canada into one political,
economic and security bloc.
The final report, published in English, Spanish and French,
is scheduled for submission to all three governments by Sept. 30, according to
the Center for Strategic & International
Studies.
CSIS boasts of playing a large role in the passage of the
North American Free Trade Agreement in 1994 a treaty that set in motion
a political movement many believe resembles the early stages of the European
Community on its way to becoming the European Union.
"The results of the study will enable policymakers to make
sound, strategic, long-range policy decisions about North America, with an
emphasis on regional integration," explains Armand B. Peschard-Sverdrup,
director of CSIS' Mexico Project. "Specifically, the project will focus on a
detailed examination of future scenarios, which are based on current trends,
and involve six areas of critical importance to the trilateral relationship:
labor mobility, energy, the environment, security, competitiveness and border
infrastructure and logistics."
(Story continues below)
The data collected for the report is based on seven secret
roundtable sessions involving between 21 and 45 people and conducted by CSIS.
The participants are politicians, business people, labor leaders and academics
from all three countries with equal representation.
All of this is described in a CSIS report,
"North
American Future 2025 Project."
"The free flow of people across national borders will
undoubtedly continue throughout the world as well as in North America, as will
the social, political and economic challenges that accompany this trend," says
the report. "In order to remain competitive in the global economy, it is
imperative for the twenty-first century North American labor market to possess
the flexibility necessary to meet industrial labor demands on a transitional
basis and in a way that responds to market forces."
As WND reported
last week, the controversial "Secure Borders, Economic Opportunity and
Immigration Reform Act of 2007," which would grant millions of illegal aliens
the right to stay in the U.S. under certain conditions, contains provisions for
the acceleration of the Security and Prosperity
Partnership, a plan for North American economic and defense integration
with remarkable similarities to the CSIS plan.
The bill, as worked out by Senate and White House
negotiators, cites the SPP agreement signed by President Bush and his
counterparts in Mexico and Canada March 23, 2005 an agreement that has
been criticized as a blueprint for building a European Union-style merger of
the three countries of North America.
"It is the sense of Congress that the United States and
Mexico should accelerate the implementation of the Partnership for Prosperity
to help generate economic growth and improve the standard of living in Mexico,
which will lead to reduced migration," the draft legislation states on page 211
on the version time-stamped May 18, 2007 11:58 p.m.
Since agreement on the major provisions of the bill was
announced late last week, a firestorm of opposition has ignited across the
country. Senators and representatives are reporting heavy volumes of phone
calls and e-mails expressing outrage with the legislation they believe
represents the largest "amnesty" program ever contemplated by the federal
government.
Meanwhile, while many continue to express skepticism about a
plot to integrate North America along the lines of the European Union,
WND reported
last week that 14 years ago, one of world's most celebrated economists and
management experts said it was already on the fast track and nothing
could stop it.
Peter F. Drucker, in one of his dozens of best-selling
books, "Post Capitalist Society," published in 1993, wrote that the European
Community, the progenitor of the European Union, "triggered the attempt to
create a North American economic community, built around the United States but
integrating both Canada and Mexico into a common market."
"So far this attempt is purely economic in its goal," wrote
the Presidential Medal of Freedom honoree. "But it can hardly remain so in the
long run."
Drucker describes in his book the worldwide trends toward
globalization that were evident back then the creation and empowerment
of transnational organizations and institutions, international environmental
goals regarding carbon dioxide and agreements to fight terrorism long before
9/11.
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