OpEdNews

Original Content at 
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Updating-the-Militarizatio-by-Stephen-Lendman-090313-946.html

March 13, 2009

Updating the Militarization and Annexation of North America

By Stephen Lendman

Updating the Militarization and Annexation of North America - by
Stephen Lendman

The title refers to the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North
America (SPP), also known as the North American Union - formerly
launched at a March 23, 2005 Waco, Texas meeting attended by George
Bush, Mexico's President Vincente Fox, and Canadian Prime Minister
Paul Martin. It's for a tri-national agreement, below the radar, for
greater economic, political, and security integration with secret
business and government working groups devising binding policies with
no public knowledge or legislative debate.

In short, it's a military-backed corporate coup d'etat against the
sovereignty of three nations, their populations and legislative
bodies. It's a dagger through the heart of democratic freedom in all
three, yet the public is largely unaware of what's happening.

Last April, New Orleans hosted the last SPP summit. Ever since,
progress may have stalled given the gravity of the global economic
crisis and top priority need to address it. Nonetheless, what's known
to date is updated below plus some related information.

Last September, the Army Times reported that the 3rd Infantry's 1st
Brigade Combat Team in Iraq would be re-deployed at home (October 1)
as "an on-call federal response force for natural or manmade
emergencies and disasters, including terrorist attacks."

"This marks the first time an active unit has been given a dedicated
assignment to NorthCom, a joint command established in 2002 to provide
command and control for federal homeland defense efforts and
coordinate defense support of civil authorities."

Then on December 1, the Washington Post reported that the Pentagon
will deploy 20,000 troops nationwide by 2011 "to help state and local
officials respond to a nuclear attack or other domestic catastrophe."
Three "rapid-reaction" combat units are planned. Two or more others
may follow. They'll be supplemented by 80 smaller National Guard units
trained to respond to chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear,
high-yield explosive, and other domestic "terror" attacks or
disturbances. In other words, homeland militarization and occupation
are planned using troops trained to kill.

The pretext is national security. In fact, they'll be on-call against
another major terrorist attack, real or contrived, as well as civil
unrest given the gravity of the economic crisis, its affect on
millions, and likelihood that sooner or later they'll react. Armed
combat troops will supplement militarized local police in case
security crackdowns are ordered or martial law declared.

"Catastrophic Emergency" procedures are in place to react to
situations, "natural or manmade," according to DHS/FEMA's March 2008
"Preparedness for the Next Catastrophic Disaster" policy paper. Should
conditions warrant, initiatives to suspend the Constitution and
declare martial law are in place, but militarizing America for
business is also at issue.

Last October 1, the Canadian Action Party posted a "COUP IN USA ALERT"
after the Bush administration announced the homeland deployment of
troops with "$100 billion (bailout) dollars" to do it.

What's Likely in Prospect

SPP efforts paused during the Bush to Obama transition, but "deep
integration" plans remain. On January 19, Ottawa's Carleton
University's Centre for Trade Policy and Law outlined an agenda for
America and Canada going forward. It called for "early and sustained
cooperation" at a time of continuing global crisis, to include
security, defense, trade and competitiveness.

It said the "most pressing issue is the need to re-think the
architecture for managing North America's common economic space
(including) trade liberalization." It used language like "re-imagining
(and) modernizing the border" that reads like erasing it and doing the
same with Mexico. In a similar vein, it recommends "integrating
national regulatory regimes into one that applies on both sides of the
border." It called the arrival of a new Washington administration "a
golden opportunity" to forge a "mutually beneficial agenda (that) will
define global and North American governance for years to come."

It mentioned the specter of protectionism and need to avoid it given
the current economic climate. It advocates a "more ambitious Canada-US
Partnership" beyond NAFTA," in co-partnership with Mexico.

Titled "North America Next," a recent Arizona State University North
American Center for Transborder Studies report called for "sustainable
and security competitiveness" and deeper US-Canada-Mexico integration
through "sustainable security and effective trade and transportation
(to) make (the three nation) North America(n partnership) safer, more
economically viable, and more prosperous."

Both Carleton and Arizona State University project participants want
SPP initiatives invigorated under a new Washington administration,
especially in a climate of global economic crisis when addressing it
takes precedence.

Other Issues in Play

"The Canadian's" Mike Finch "North American Union (NAU) watch" reports
that US and Canadian organizations want to end free flow Internet
information. He cites an "net-neutrality activist group" discovery of
"plans for the demise of the free Internet by 2010 in Canada," and by
2012 globally.

Canada's two largest ISPs, Bell Canada and TELUS, are behind a scheme
to limit browsing, block out sites, and charge fees on most others as
part of a 2012 "planned full (NAU) launching." Web host I Power's
Reese Leysen called it "beyond censorship: it is killing the biggest
(ever) 'ecosystem' of free expression and freedom of speech." He cited
big company inside sources providing information on "exclusivity deals
between ISPs and big content providers (like TV studios and video game
publishers) "to decide which sites will be in the standard package
offered customers, leaving the rest of the Internet unreachable except
for fees."

Leysen called his source "100% reliable" and cited similar information
from a Dylan Pattyn Time magazine article, based on Bell Canada and
TELUS sources. Plans are for "only the top 100 - 200 sites making the
cut in the initial subscription package," likely to include major news
outlets at the expense of smaller, alternative ones. "The Internet
would become a playground for billion-dollar content providers," like
cable TV providers, unless efforts are made to stop it.

Leysen thinks US and global ISPs have similar plans that include free
speech restrictions and privacy invasions. The stakes are high if he's
right. Yet the profit potential is huge and friendly governments may
oblige. Also involved are "deceptive marketing and fear tactics" (like
citing child pornography threats) to gain public approval for
subscription services masquerading as online safety. The time to stop
it is now.

Earlier Plans to Rename SPP/NAU

Last March, Canada's Fraser Institute proposed it in an article
titled: "Saving the North American Security and Prosperity
Partnership" at a time of mounting criticism. It recommended
discarding NAU in favor of the "North American Standards and
Regulatory Area (NASRA)" to disguise its real purpose. It called the
"SPP brand" tarnished so changing it was essential to continue where
NAFTA left off by combining security with quality of life issues like
food safety, global warming, climate change, and pandemic diseases. It
also wants better communications to sell it to the public. Their idea
is to fool most people until it's too late to matter.

Rumblings in America at the State Level

Running counter to "deep integration," News with Views (NWV) writer
Jim Kouri headlined on February 23: "Individual States Declaring
Sovereignty." He cites political strategist Mike Baker saying
"Americans are becoming disenchanted with the federal government's
lack of perspective on" matters like: "illegal aliens, crime, (and)
economic turmoil - while intruding into the private lives of citizens
with gun-control laws and other intrusions," issues our Founding
Fathers "relegated to the individual states." Bothersome also are
unfunded mandates that states can't handle given their over-stretched
budgets and need to cut back. In addition, Washington's intrusion into
local law enforcement is a big issue.

So far, nine states have declared sovereignty and another dozen or
more are considering it. Enacted or proposed legislation varies from
all states' rights to selective ones like gun control and abortion.

As of January 30, Washington State is one of the former under House
and Senate bill HJM-4009 stating:

"The Tenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
specifically provides that, 'The powers not delegated to the United
States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are
reserved to the States respectively, or to the people;' and The Tenth
Amendment defines the total scope of federal power as being those
powers specifically granted to it by the Constitution of the United
States and no more."

Earlier in January, New Hampshire enacted similar legislation (HCR-6)
"affirming States' rights based on Jeffersonian principles." Other
states doing it totally or in part include California, Arizona,
Montana, Michigan, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Georgia. In addition, the
following states are considering similar measures: Colorado,
Pennsylvania, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Arkansas, Idaho, Alabama,
Maine, Nevada, Hawaii and Alaska, and reportedly, Wyoming and
Mississippi may as well.

Besides states rights issues, driving the current movement are:

-- the grave and deteriorating economy;

-- Wall Street's harmful control over policy;

-- its effects on checks and balances;

-- excessive bailouts for an insolvent and corrupted banking system at
the expense of local state budgets and rights; and

-- reckless and unsustainable spending and national debt levels
driving the nation to bankruptcy and placing untenable burdens on
states.

Overall, concern is that Washington is complicit in driving the nation
to ruin, and they want out or at least lean that way. If this movement
gains strength, at the least it will slow "deep integration," stall it
for a considerable time, but won't likely halt it. Corporate America
wants it, and most often what it wants, it gets.

It may just take longer than planned, much longer given the gravity of
the global crisis, how hard it will be to resolve, and how long doing
it will take. Some experts predict another Great Depression as bad or
worse than the first one and far worse than Japan's "lost decades" -
from 1990 to the present.

Top priority in world capitals and corporate boardrooms is preventing
it if possible. Except for "national security," other initiatives are
secondary.

Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
[email protected].

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The
Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday through
Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with
distinguished guests on world and national issues. All programs are
archived for easy listening.


Author's Bio: I am a 72 year old, retired, progressive small
businessman concerned about all the major national and world issues,
committed to speak out and write about them.>end

Peace,
Doc


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