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NAFTA: Kicked Up a Notch
The North American Free Trade Agreement is the world's most advanced example of the U.S.-led free trade model. It's not just about economics any more. The expansion of NAFTA into the Security and Prosperity Partnership reveals the road ahead for other nations entering into free trade agreements. It is not a road most nations -- or the U.S. public -- would take if they knew where it led.
The first problem is that very few people know about this next step of "deep integration." In March 2005, Presidents George Bush, Vicente Fox and Prime Minister Paul Martin in Waco, Texas launched the Security and Prosperity Partnership with a splash. Although it had few visible results, the Waco meeting of the "Three Amigos" set into motion an underground process that spawned its own working groups, rules, recommendations, and agreements — all below the radar of the legislatures and the public in the three nations. These rules and trinational programs have profound effect on the environment, the daily lives of citizens, and the future of all three countries.
The SPP not only further greases the wheels of corporate cooperation and potentially increases U.S. access to Mexican oil. Its security component represents a new and ominous form of integration, all in the name of counter-terrorism.
The SPP's Real ObjectivesFrom its origins in Waco, the SPP has developed through several formal meetings, including a March 31, 2006 meeting of heads of state in Cancun and a ministerial meeting in Canada in February 2007. Canadian civil society watchdogs also outed a secret meeting of high-level government, military and business people in Banff in September of 2006.
The official U.S. web page describes the SPP as "a White House-led initiative among the United States and the two nations it borders — Canada and Mexico — to increase security and to enhance prosperity among the three countries through greater cooperation."
"White House-led" is a key element. When the heads of state met in Waco and in subsequent meetings to follow up on NAFTA, both Canada and Mexico had some very serious concerns. Canada was embroiled in trade conflicts with the United States (soft lumber, beef) that it wanted to see resolved through NAFTA mechanisms. Mexico's right-wing government, meanwhile, has found increasingly untenable the stark contradiction between open borders for merchandise and the criminalization of immigrants. On the one hand, it had a commitment to greater integration under the free trade model; on the other it was under tremendous political pressure to defend Mexicans migrating to the United States. None of these issues made it into the SPP. U.S. security concerns, and corporate demands for fewer obstacles to border-hopping production and sales, hijacked the trinational agenda.
Instead, the SPP has three fundamental objectives. The Bush administration wants to create more advantageous conditions for transnational corporations and remove remaining barriers to the flow of capital and crossborder production within the framework of NAFTA. It wants to secure access to natural resources in the other two countries, especially oil. And it wants to create a regional security plan based on "pushing its borders out" into a security perimeter that includes Mexico and Canada.
On the liberalization side, the SPP has focused on simplifying procedures for doing business and creating more unified norms and standards. The SPP seeks to make it easier for U.S. companies to ship production offshore, eliminate specific Canadian and Mexican labor and environmental standards in the interest of "harmonization", and assure that harsher security measures don't interfere with crossborder business.
For Mexico, the harmonization process -- like NAFTA before it -- does not take into account its less-developed status or the pressing social needs of its people that could mandate special protections or safeguards. Many of the priorities of the SPP benefit only a small handful of powerful actors, such as greater patent protection (Mexico holds very few patents) and joint anti-piracy campaigns (piracy is a major employer in Mexico and benefits low-income consumers).
In negotiations between equal partners concerned with public well-being, very different issues would be on the table. The discourse of "three great nations united in a common cause" falls apart when compared to the actual content of the agreements and shows instead two great nations subordinated to the powerful interests of the United States. Equal partners would operate in the global market as a bloc with common interests. But the three countries don't act as a bloc in multilateral forums like the World Trade Organization and the numerous trade disputes that have arisen among them, as well as the way they compete for foreign markets, attest to their separate national agendas.
The inequality of the NAFTA three is particularly apparent in the SPP's approach to natural resources. For U.S. oil companies and their geopolitical interests, Mexico's nationalized petroleum sector and state-run company, PEMEX, has been a major thorn in the side. Oil companies relish the opportunity to invest in the reserves there but are limited by current Mexican law. With the sector under government control, Mexico can decide when and how much oil it wants to export to the United States based on its own national needs.
The vast majority of Mexicans, however, celebrate nationalization of the oil industry as a source of national pride and a strategic instrument of development. Instead of coming out with recommendations to privatize the sector immediately, SPP documents have cited the low productivity of PEMEX as a major regional problem, mandated studies of its poor performance -- not of its role in national development -- and begun to prepare the ground for more private investment. The first step, according to a 2007 National Competitiveness Council report, would be for Mexico to spin off non-associated gas production into a separate entity called GASMEX.
The Security DimensionNAFTA was signed before the current Bush administration took office and before the terrorist attack of September 11. SPP on the other hand, was born in the "global war on terror" era and reflects an inordinate emphasis on U.S. security as interpreted by the Department of Homeland Security. The head of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff, along with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Mexico's Secretary of Finance Carlos Gutierrez, represent the three ministries charged with attending SPP ministerial conferences.
National security is not simply part of the political sell. It is central to the NAFTA-plus agenda. The SPP explicitly ties together the U.S. trade and security agendas under the pretext of greater integration. Its accords mandate border actions, military and police training, modernization of equipment and adoption of new technologies, all under the logic of the U.S. counter-terrorism campaign.
For Mexico and Canada, these new security priorities attached to regional integration are not only misplaced, but expensive and politically threatening. Mexico has historically been reticent to allow U.S. agents to operate in its territory because, historically, the United States has posed the greatest threat to its national security. Mexico also has a policy of neutrality in international affairs that prevents its government from becoming embroiled in conflicts that do not directly affect the nation.
The SPP measures to coordinate security have pressured Mexico to militarize its southern border and adopt repressive measures toward Central and South Americans presumably in transit to the United States. The false conflation of undocumented immigration with security in the United States has also led to measures that have little to do with Mexico's own national security and cause friction with friendly nations, such as the decision to require visas for citizens of Brazil and Ecuador to enter the country.
Aside from real questions about their effectiveness, these programs raise serious questions about national sovereignty and national priorities. There are few reasons to believe that U.S. security is synonymous with a strategic security plan for Mexico or Canada. While some threats are indeed international and intelligence-sharing as well as coordinated action are necessary, these mechanisms should be developed in the context of each nation's own security agenda.
By taking on the U.S. security agenda, Canada and Mexico put themselves at greater risk. When the Mexican congress dutifully presented a revised counter-terrorism law this year, an opposition congressman argued, "We don't want to be immersed in a cycle where the enemies of other nations are automatically put forth as our own enemies." Moreover, in all three countries, significant civil society movements have questioned whether the high-tech solutions advanced by Homeland Security (and that profit major military suppliers) are really the best and most resource-efficient answer to security challenges. Again, for the most part, the decisions are being made without public knowledge or consultation.
Deepening the ChaosThere are many problems with the SPP and the White House's goal of "deep integration." Perhaps the most fundamental is that it takes place at a time when North American integration faces a crisis. Economic integration under NAFTA has led to job loss and the erosion of job security and quality in the United States, while also increasing unemployment in Mexico. Over thirteen years, the model has confirmed, rather than reversed, Mexico's status as the less-developed partner. The rise in immigration to the United States attests to the failure of NAFTA as a development mechanism. Moreover, it has not increased the U.S. competitive edge although it has delivered record profits to a few major global traders. Unfortunately for the majority, those "few" are now driving the efforts to deepen integration under the NAFTA-plus-Homeland-Security model.
But to deepen integration would mean deepening the contradictions and the problems that have led most Americans to expresstheir rejection of the free-trade model in recent polls, and that has spurred widespread public protest in Mexico and Canada.
Currently four more free trade agreements are before the U.S. Congress. The Security and Prosperity Partnership for North America demonstrates that this model of economic integration has taken on a momentum of its own, unaccountable to legislatures and citizens, and driven by interests that do not represent the public good. Citizens and their representatives need to mount a concerted effort to re-examine these policies, to bring them to light, and to halt movement forward until a strong and informed consensus exists on their value to society.
FPIF columnist Laura Carlsen is director of the IRC Americas Program. The Americas Program is online at http://americas.irc-online.org/.
For More InformationMiguel Pickard, Trinational Elites Map North American Future in "NAFTA Plus," http://americas.irc-online.org/am/386
Council on Foreign Relations, "Building a North American Community" http://www.cfr.org/content/publications/attachments/NorthAmerica_TF_final.pdf
Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, http://spp.gov
Robert Pastor, "A North American Community" http://www.american.edu/internationalaffairs/cnas/PastorTrilateral.pdf
SPP: Myths vs Facts, http://www.spp.gov/myths_vs_facts.asp
DHS Testimony to Congress, http://www.dhs.gov/xnews/testimony/testimony_0053.shtm
Copyright 2007 Foreign Policy In Focus

24 Comments so far
Show AllWhen I first heard about this secret meeting with Bush and Canada and Mexico, I questioned both my Senators and Representative in California, but never received a reply. Just think, if this pact goes forward, there will be privatized highways running clear through Mexico, up through many American citizens property ( which will be seized) in the U.S.and all the way through Canada. There will be truck loads of illegal immigrants and terrorists hidden benearth the produce, etc. It's ridiculous and foretells oppression and slavery for the average American.
Here we have another corollary to Michael Parenti's important article on globalization. It also fits every point Ahrundati Roy has past eloquently shared; reinforces the Friedman comment, "There could be no McDonalds without MacDonnell Douglas," and reminds me of the confessions of that CIA hitman (can't recall his name at the moment), as he exposed the manner by which most US foreign exploits are designed to protect specific corporate interests. Wonder how our military would feel to learn it's little more than a mercentary force for capitalist interests?
I heard the new leadership in Canada wants to adopt our pay with insurance medical. It has failed here so the only reason would be the insurance companies want to spread all over the world. This will slam the door on more people who will not receive care because they will not be able to afford insurance.
That answers the question "Where will all of the people find work?"
In the military of course.
And so like always, money wins and everyone else loses.
Does anyone remember the movie Antz? Animated thing, kind of uneven, but decent, all in all. Seems the grasshoppers were running things and stealing most of what the ants had, until the ants realized that they outnumbered the grasshoppers dramatically. And the grasshoppers KNEW this, and did what they could to produce and maintain fear.
It's time for the ants to rise up and take the hill back from the grasshoppers, kids. We outnumber them DRAMATICALLY, and it's time for us to wake up and realize just how much power we really have. Time to take back what is ours by right.
If this is allowed to go through, and not stopped, then big money just gets more and more while we lose more and more. What ELSE are you willing to give up? You've already kissed off your kid's futures and the country's international standing, not to mention our treasury for the next 50 years. We OWE money to damn near everyone else on the planet, including about $37 BILLION to Mexico. In fact, Mexico actually has more big money people than WE do here. And look at just how wonderful THEIR country is doing. Why do you think all their people are coming here?
If we don't stop this, there will be nothing left here for the 98% of us who populate the country. And that is EXACTLY what W's "Ownership society" is all about. THEY own EVERYTHING, and you own NOTHING. Welcome to the third world, folks, we are already there, by all standards. We produce NOTHING, we just consume. We import only finished goods and export only raw materials. Our elections are a joke, and we are being run by those who don't consider themselves responsible to us in any way shape or form. That sounds awfully third world to me.
This MUST be stopped, or we are all screwed, plain and simple.
The free trade mantra is a religion. Evidence of success is an article of faith not based on observable facts.
Wages are down drastically for the vast majority of Americans and Mexicans. Before you repeat the media baloney - calculate inflation adjusted wage for the median worker not the average. Only the top few have made it big. The near top are treading water and the rest are sinking fast. Of course, those at the bottom in the world are not losing either. Nothing is as low as you go till you die and are no longer counted.
"War is a Racket", by Smedley Butler, USMC retired. Basically says he was enforcer for American corporations. This country is an Arms Economy and always has been. And the use of our military to further economic gain is not surprising. It just used to be a bit more discrete, but now the whole world knows. And some day the Americans will know. All these international wars are being fought for economic and political gain. And the wars are being blessed, on both sides, making the issue even more explosive. NAFTA is the infrastructure needed by corporations to continue the raping of the land and the exploitation of workers. NAFTA is exactly why 12 million Mexican migrants showed up for work one day in the United States of Everything.
Hoa binh
We go to war to make the world safe for American Business. Our immigrant "problem" did not exist until the American Government decided to go after Mexican Oil and to destroy their rising Proletariat.
And let's not forget that it was during the Democrat Clinton presidency that NAFTA was hatched and enacted. When it comes to cashing in on transnational corporate capitalism, it doesn't matter whether you're a Democrat or Republican in Washington. Each party like obedient servants will elbow the next to get to the head of the hand-out line.
Very well said WJM.
No--although Clinton did ramrod NAFTA in 1993 by throwing pork in all directions, NAFTA was cooked up by Bush I in the US and Carlos Salinas de Gortari here in Mexico.
Our "leaders" here are so corrupt that they would sell the remaining half of this country that Santa Anna did not sell in a heartbeat. They won't be negatively affected by any of this stuff--they are too busy putting the revenue of PEMEX into their pockets and bank accounts in the Caymans.
I agree with all of you. I am a Canadian and I, too, am totally disgusted with what is being cooked up, behind closed doors, to further enrich a few.
You are absolutely right, evelyna, about our health care system. It is not perfect, but it is a whole lot better than some and it is constantly under attack by those same few.
Our current Conservative government is promoting all of this and we are going to do our best to boot them all out of office next election. By the way, we refer to our current Prime Minister as Bush Jr.
Moonraven: I was invited to lecture in the Cayman Islands several years ago and was dumbfounded to find maybe THREE physical banks in the tiny town center... it's ALL legal addresses. Ain't hardly a bank in site... virtual monetary reality, perfect fit in Orwellian times when war means peace and freedom means cultural & fiscal enslavement.
About 20 years ago 60 Minutes had a segment that captured on an undercover camera a USAID official at a businessmen's conference.He aproached a group-cocktail in hand-and boastfully told them that he could help them find labor even cheaper than what they were discussing.Think it was 28 cents an hour versus 33. At that time CBS had a bit more integrity-this should have been an explosive story.Don't recall any one else following up on it.
All these years of "outsourcing" [more doublespeak obviously] has hurt the US terribly-however a decent president could begin to reverse this.A real president interested in US security would call every one of these moves what they are-unpatriotic.Not many companies that still needed to do business in the US would risk the backlash of being called out by the president. Now if many companies felt they neede to flee like Halliburton to avoid prosecution that would create a problem-temporarily.In the long term what is needed is a thorough housecleaning in hopes of establishing an honorable society.Such a society could help the entire planet cuz if you blunt the power of the worst of us-the rest of us will share with the world.
For many years the US should have been providing aid to keep Mexicans on their land and improving their standard of living.Instead-the Maquiladora [sp.?] was setup with great fanfare.But the wages were just above starvation level and their land was horribly polluted. Now these expanded trade agreements have caused skyrocketing food prices.The Mexican peasantry will almost certainly revolt soon. Will the US join in their repression or more likely pontificate a bit and stand idly by?
klever, you've made a crucial point, that "the US should have been providing aid to keep Mexicans on their land and improving their standard of living". This would have prevented the Mexican stampede north that is now splitting apart the Republican party. But the way for the US to aid the Mexican farmers is to stop dumping petro-corn in Mexico.
There is no moral or logical reason behind transnational food shipment. You do not feed people. You teach people to feed themselves. What the Mexicans need, as everyone on the planet needs, is free, high quality documentation of the methods employed by their peers worldwide, and the results.
The new US foreign policy that progressives are advancing to fill the void of imperial collapse is simply to empower the peasants of the world, so we have limits on the size of farms, we guarantee access to land for everyone who wants to farm, we give them free information, we ensure that their local markets remain their own, and we make sure they take responsibility.
The most relevant point is that power corrupts so you have to prevent it from concentrating. The vast majority recognize this as obvious. And now, more and more people are learning how to prevent power from concentrating. Now, where are you getting your food? I hope from your local small independent organic farmer. You can get your biofuel there too. Better still, produce it all yourself to cut the capitalist central planners entirely out of the loop. This strategy is nothing new - it's been practiced by the vast majority of people across the history of the planet.
NAFTA is nothing alongside the next big raid -- Plan Puebla Panama - will include stealing everything of value as far south as you can go. Seems as if stealing stuff is better than buying stuff.
to add to rtdrury comments: Living in New Bedford, MA area I witnessed the ICE raid of 361 undocumented workers at the NB Michael Bianco plant on March 6. NB is high unemployment city as over 20,000 manufacturing jobs, mostly union, have fled the area over last 25 years. Many native folks see undocumented taking jobs from them.
First off, the undocumented don't hire themselves. As in this case they're hired by unscrupulous employers who should be severely punished. Secondly, I think the more important issue is why do the undocumented take the very dangerous trek across the US-Mexico border. I view them as economic refugees.
Doing some reading of facts and analysis from Taxpayers for Common Sense (conservative) and from Dollars and Sense magazine (progressive) it seems US agribusiness has a racket going on Al Capone would be jealous of! Corn, cotton, wheat, etc producers get about $15-20 billion a year in tax subsidies. The largest 10% get 73% of the take and the smallest 2/3 get nothing. Subsidy is production-based so the more they produce, the more money they get. The subsidy is often used to buy up smaller farms and that leads to a bigger subsidy. What corporate welfare! Meanwhile small farms go bust (5.5 million in 1950 vs 2 million today.)
With deregulation of Mexican economy happening in mid-80's and especially since 1994 and NAFTA, US corn has been flooding Mexico so much that the price of corn dropped 50% in 1997. As a result, over 1 million small corn farmers went belly-up and many travel to US to find work to survive. More and more maquiladora jobs are being shipped out to China and elsewhere for cheaper labor so that job avenue is closing.
Bottom line: because of NAFTA-type trade agreements and huge tax subsidies to US agribusiness, our tax dollars are helping wreak havoc on Mexican economy. And as a result we pay even more taxes to build a 700 mile wall and hire tons more ICE and border patrol agents. Wouldn't it be more prudent to have tax policies that help SMALL US farmers and don't lead to devastation for SMALL Mexican farmers?
Clinton and Gore were the ones who made Bush Senior and his corporate masters' dream of enacting NAFTA reality. Clinton, the best Republican president we ever had. Now the party wants to nominate his wife, or better still, Gore, as if there's a diffrence between them. America is done, just stick a fork in it.
They're trying to pass this North American Union boondoggle off as the equivalent of the EU. And yet, if a country wants to join the EU, they have to renounce the death penalty--something the US will never do. They also have to measure up in terms of human rights, i.e., gender equality entrenched; no torture. The US can't even get an ERA in their constitution, much less pass same-sex marriage legislation. And don't even get me started on torture. I don't know about Mexico, but Canada stands to lose a lot in exchange for access to the US market--not the least of which is what's left of our universal healthcare and our reproductive rights. Just what Canadians need: union with a warmonger that's 9 trillion dollars in debt!
Does anyone know: DOES THIS HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE TRADE DEAL CHARLIE RANGEL IS NEGOTIATING IN SECRET? IS THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP BETRAYING US ON THIS ONE TOO, AS THEY DID ON THE ORIGINAL NAFTA AND THE IRAQ SUPPLEMENTAL???
Follow the path being paved and money already spent. All goes back to 1. Guv dubya 2. Guv Rick "good hair" Perry (R) Texass and his Trans-Texas Corridor. NAFTA etal deals won't work without the TTC-35 & TTC-69 projects being provided coutesy of Cintra-Zachary consortium. Security my ass! How secure will we be when more imported Chinese crap goes unchecked in shipping containers from Mexico until it gets to central Texass?
In order to overcome this people will have to open up to radical ideas that have been in slumber for decades in the industrialized countries. That is sadly far away. In between the time the ideas are given the time of day, IF that happens, and now is a lot of organizing and popular education. The first step would be a temporary partisan sacrifice, letting go of the Democratic Party and creating the groundwork for a viable alternative. I don't know if the left can agree long enough for this to happen. We'll see.
One basic difference between the EU and NAFTA was that when the EU integrated, they worked hard to have infrastructure and human right guarantees in place in the less developed partners before they lowered their movement barriers. Furthermore, the lowering of those movement barriers was always a two way street. The nationals of countries like the UK that got an influx of immigrants also got right to buy vacation and retirement homes in the less developed partners. The nationals of the UK at least got a chance to take jobs in France and Germany. There hasn't really been much like that under NAFTA. US citizens have faced a reduction in workforce participation(percent of US citizens with jobs)-while there has been high levels of immigration to the US.
We need a fundamentally different policy-one that has broad support in both the US and Mexico. I suspect the appropriate formula here will be enforcement(and enhancement) of US immigration laws combined--and reduction of US concentration of wealth- with increased aid to Mexicans-and increased pressure on the Mexican government to eliminate corruption, contain concentration of wealth and respect human rights.
With this kind of package, Mexicans will get something real-and so will most Americans. I suspect the wealthy will like the status quo much more-but ultimately, the wealthy just don't have that many votes.
A question that was raised that I think is important:
US agricultural products depend on heavy petroleum purchases. A big chunk of the $800 Billion deficit is petroleum purchases. What would US agricultural production be like in a situation in which the US operated under constraints similar to other countries(i.e. nearly balanced trade)?
What I think is really sad here:
The US could have done anything with this enormous capacity to borrow-instead, it has liquidated enormous assets that took generations to build.
It's great to see so much involvement on a topic that has been little known up until just lately. I need to report an error. This version came from the FPIF site where an editorial error added the word "Mexico's" before U.S. Sec. of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez in the list of U.S. government officials involved directly in the SPP. I regret not having noticed this sooner. A longer version of the article can be found at http://americas.irc-online.org/am/4276
Laura Carlsen