WorldNetDaily.com

THE NEW WORLD DISORDER
Bush OKs 'integration' with European Union
Congress never asked about new obligation


Posted: May 8, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com




President Bush signed an agreement creating a "permanent body" that 
commits the U.S. to "deeper transatlantic economic integration," without 
ratification by the Senate as a treaty or passage by Congress as a law.

The "Transatlantic Economic Integration" between the U.S. and the 
European Union was signed April 30 at the White House by Bush, German 
Chancellor Angela Merkel – the current president of the European Council 
– and European Commission President José Manuel Barroso.

The document acknowledges "the transatlantic economy remains at the 
forefront of globalization," arguing that the U.S. and the European 
Union "seek to strengthen transatlantic economic integration."

The agreement established a new Transatlantic Economic Council to be 
chaired on the U.S. side by a cabinet-level officer in the White House 
and on the EU side by a member of the European Commission.

The current U.S. head of the new Transatlantic Economic Council is Allan 
Hubbard, assistant to the president for Economic Policy and director of 
the National Economic Council.

The current EU head of the council is Günther Verheugen, vice-President 
of the European Commission in charge of enterprise and industry.


The Transatlantic Economic Council was tasked with creating regulatory 
convergence between the U.S. and the EU on some 40 different public 
policy areas, including intellectual property rights, developing 
security standards for international trade, getting U.S. GAAP (Generally 
Accepted Accounting Practices) recognized in Europe, developing 
innovation and technology in health industries, implementing RFID (Radio 
Frequency Identification) technologies, developing a science-based plan 
on bio-based products and establishing a "regular dialogue" to address 
obstacles to investment.

At a joint press conference, Bush thanked the other two leaders for 
signing the "trans-Atlantic economic integration plan," commenting that, 
"It is a recognition that the closer that the United States and the EU 
become, the better off our people will be."

Barroso said the Transatlantic Economic Council is meant to be "a 
permanent body, with senior people on both sides of the Atlantic."

As WND has reported, Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez repeatedly 
has pushed for North American integration, much as the April 30 
agreement proposes closer U.S.-EU integration.

Mexico's ambassador to the U.N., Enrique Berruga, has called for a North 
American Union to be created in the next eight years.

But the Bush administration's push for North American integration is 
facing increasing opposition within Congress.

WND reported Rep. Virgil Goode, R-Va., has introduced House Concurrent 
Resolution 40, which opposes the administration's Security and 
Prosperity Partnership, blocks a NAFTA Superhighway System and expresses 
opposition to the U.S. entry into a North American Union with Mexico and 
Canada.

WND also has reported a movement led by Phyllis Schlafly of Eagle Forum 
has led to an increasing number of state legislatures proposing 
resolutions opposing a North American Union.

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