SPP:
The Globalization of North America Continues
by
Richard D. Vogel
The ultracons have it all wrong and the neocons are glad
that they do.
The
straw dog that the ultracons are beating to death in print and on the Internet
is the chimerical North American Union, purported to be a supranational state
that intends to override the sovereignty of the United States and subject all
the citizens of the empire to the interests of Canada and/or Mexico.
Alas,
the fate of straw dogs is always the same; they are cursed and beaten and then
unceremoniously discarded after they have served their purpose.
No
matter -- they were never alive in the first place.
The
issue that the non-existent international union is diverting attention away from
is the continuing globalization of North America and the havoc that it is wreaking
on working-class communities and the environment of the continent -- a campaign
that is being guided by the invisible but heavy hand of big North American capital
through the tri-lateral Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) utilizing the
offices of the Presidents of the U.S. and Mexico and the Prime Minister of Canada.
This
secretive successor to the now infamous NAFTA has met three times at significant
(if not symbolic) locations: the SPP debuted at Bush's Texas ranch in 2005; met
a second time in the Mexican resort town of Cancun in 2006; and held a third summit
last month in Montebello, Canada, near Ottawa.
A
map of the continent helps orient a discussion of SPP efforts to support the globalization
of North America.

The
stability of capitalism in North America depends on the continuous and unrestricted
importation of cheap manufactured goods from the Far Eastern Pacific Rim. A current
initiative of North American capital, championed by the SPP, is to divert as much
commodity traffic as possible from the unionized ports of the U.S. and Canada
to the South in order to exploit cheap transportation labor in that region. Because
of the sheer mass of commodities flowing through global supply chains, every reduction
in labor costs, no matter how minute, yields huge profits.
Existing
Routes
The
existing supply chains through the hemispheric South originate at the Eastern
Pacific Rim, traverse the Pacific Ocean, and either: 1) land on the west coast
of Mexico and head north through Mexico and the Southwestern U.S. via truck and
rail to destinations in the heartland of the U.S.; or 2) pass through the Panama
Canal, land on Mexico's east coast and follow the same routes north. A formal
mandate of the SPP is to facilitate this flow of commodities.
The
SPP summits have followed the freight. The launch of the SPP was staged at President
Bush's ranch less than 25 miles west of Waco on the mid-continent I-35 NAFTA corridor
which carries 70 percent of the freight from Mexico, and the Cancun summit was
held within sight of the container ship traffic from the Panama Canal that passes
through the Yucatan Channel. The significance of the location of the meeting at
Montebello will be discussed below.
Proposed
Routes
The
SPP bestowed its blessings on the plan for a new container ship port at Punta
Colonet in Baja California capable of handling the largest vessels. The plan has
been put on hold with the start of the project to widen the Panama Canal, but
the deal might not be dead. Punta Colonet would establish a new southern route
that could divert container freight from ports in the North, especially Los Angeles/Longbeach,
and send it through the fragile landscape of the Sonoran Desert in order to exploit
cheaper Mexican transport labor. The environmental impact of Punta Colonet, should
the plan move forward, will irreversibly damage the air, land, and sea of the
region.
The
Atlantica project, which is presently under development, is an SPP endorsed scheme
to establish a free trade zone through the Atlantic Provinces of Canada and the
U.S. states of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, and New York. The primary goal of
Atlantica is to reroute Far Eastern container freight bound for the Upper Midwest
and Canada away from unionized ports. This flow of container traffic, referred
to as the Suez Express, also originates in the Far East but is routed through
the Indian Ocean, passes through the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean Sea, and
crosses the Atlantic Ocean. The private toll road planned for Atlantica will run
all the way to Buffalo, N.Y. Like the Punta Colonet project, the Atlantica highway
will divide and devastate another of the few unspoiled areas on the continent.
The
Montebello meeting of the SPP occurred on the northern boundary of Atlantica and
corresponded with the finalization of plans for the area.
The
fact that all three nations have now been graced by summits at strategic locations
does not signal the existence of a North American Union as the ultracons suppose.
Instead, this series of closed meetings under tight security is a strong indicator
of the progress of the ongoing globalization of North America under the SPP.
Securing
Profits and Power
In
the face of growing dissatisfaction and disillusionment with NAFTA, CAFTA, FTAA,
and free trade in general and mounting demands for congressional opposition, the
sectors of North American capitalism that are pushing globalization have resorted
to covert operations under the mantle of national and regional security and have
set loose a whole pack of straw dogs on the citizens of the continent. All of
them, including the mythical North American Union, are nothing more than distractions
from the central contradiction of the day -- globalization.
In
the current phase of class struggle in North America, SPP would be more accurately
translated as Securing Profits and Power, at the expense, of course, of working
people and the environment.