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North
American Union leader says merger just crisis away
Leading intellectual force behind effort toward EU-style unity looks
at future
World Net Daily | Dec. 15, 2006
By Jerome R. Corsi
Robert Pastor, a leading
intellectual force in the move to create an EU-style North American
Community, told WND he believes a new 9/11 crisis could be the
catalyst to merge the U.S., Mexico and Canada.
Pastor, a professor at
American University, says that in such a case the
Security and
Prosperity Partnership of North America,
or SPP – launched in 2005 by the heads of the three countries at a
summit in Waco, Texas – could be developed into a continental union,
complete with a new currency, the amero, that would replace the U.S.
dollar just as the euro has replaced the national currencies of
Europe.
In May 2005, Pastor was
co-chairman the Council on Foreign Relations task force that
produced a report entitled “Toward a North American Community,”
which
he has claimed is the blueprint
behind the SSP declared by President Bush, Mexico’s then=President
Vicente Fox, and Canada’s then-Prime Minister Paul Martin.
At American University in
Washington, D.C., Pastor directs the Center for North American
Studies where he teaches a course entitled “North
America: A Union, A Community, or Just Three Nations?”
As
WND previously has reported,
Pastor is on the board of the North American Forum on Integration,
the NAFI, a non-profit organization that holds annually holds a
mock trilateral parliament
for 100 selected students drawn from 10 universities in the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico.
Pastor had published an
interview in Spanish in the Oct. 24 issue of
Poder y Negocios. He told the
magazine crises can force decisions that otherwise would not be
made.
The 9/11 crisis made Canada and
the United States redefine the protection of their borders,” Pastor
explained. “The debt crisis in Mexico forced the government to adapt
a new economic model. The crises oblige the governments to make
difficult decisions.”
This was the first time WND had
found a major intellectual leader behind the push to integrate North
America suggest that a crisis of 9-11 proportions might be just what
was needed to advance the process toward establishing a North
American Union and the amero. WND reached Pastor in his office at
American University and conducted a telephone interview to make sure
the Spanish publication accurately reflected his views.
He affirmed the Spanish interview
represents his thinking.
“What I’m saying is that a crisis
is an event which can force democratic governments to make difficult
decisions like those that will be required to create a North
American Community,” he said. “It’s not that I want another 9/11
crisis, but having a crisis would force decisions that otherwise
might not get made.”
Pastor noted, for example that
“Europeans, facing the crisis of two World Wars, turned to the
European Community as a means to prevent war and advance their
economic interests.”
“The United States turned to the
Marshall Plan when faced with the crisis of Western Europe falling
into the hands of communism,” he said. “So, I’m not advocating, or
encouraging, or wanting a crisis, I’m only saying that in order to
take important initiatives, sometimes one manner in which this
occurs is when there is a crisis to which leaders need to respond.”
Pastor told WND he lamented that
the leadership of the three North American countries is not
positioned to make the type of tough decisions needed to advance a
North American Community agenda.
In his interview with Poder y
Negocios, he argued, “Canada has a minority government and Mexico
will soon have a minority government that will be confronted with
what amounts to an uprising that we hope will be peaceful. The
United States has a lame duck president whose principle
preoccupation is the war in Iraq and instability in the Middle
East.”
Pastor further told WND Mexico’s
Fox made a tactical mistake by laying out an overly ambitious agenda
to integrate with the United States.
“President Bush then took on the
issue of illegal immigration, and it proved to be much more
difficult than anticipated,” he said. In the absence of strong North
American leadership, is a crisis the way greater North American
integration can be expected to happen?
“There are alternatives to a
crisis for getting a major decision adopted by the president and by
the congress,” Pastor responded. “But what I am saying is that we
lack the kind of North American leadership we need. Our founding
fathers created a system of governance that was not designed to be
efficient but was designed to protect freedom. Therefore, you
created checks and balances that did protected freedom but also made
it difficult to move forward on important issues.”
Pastor was asked what North
American leaders would need to do to move toward integration.
“We need to form a customs union
to move North American integration to a new level,” Pastor argued.
“A customs union would eliminate rules of origin on the border and
agree to a common external tariff. This would be not easy but not as
difficult as NAFTA was, and it would lead to efficiencies in our
economies and in the end contribute to a better standard of living
for all parties.”
Pastor also called for a North
American Investment Fund to invest in Mexico’s infrastructure.
“If we had a North American
Investment Fund,” Pastor explained, “over the long term, you would
narrow the income gap between Mexico and the U.S.”
WND previously reported
Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, dropped his support for legislation (S.
3622) he introduced in the 109th Congress to create a North American
Investment Fund after WND pointed out the proposed law would advance
an important part of Pastor’s agenda to create a North American
Community.
Pastor was careful to distinguish
that his proposals were designed to create a North American
Community and that he never has proposed to create a North
American Union as an EU-style regional government.
“What I am recommending is a
series of functional steps that are more than incremental,” Pastor
admitted. “Each of the proposals I have laid out represent more than
just small steps. But it doesn’t represent a leap toward a North
American Union, or even to some confederation of any kind. I don’t
think either is plausible, necessary, or even helpful to contemplate
at this stage.”
The idea seems to be to put new
structures in place that change the look of the landscape. WND
pointed out to Pastor that this step-by-step approach is the same
approach taken to create the European Union. The memoirs of Jean
Monnet, regarded as the architect of European unity, finally
disclosed he had used a strategy of deceit, knowing his plan to form
a European Union would never succeed if it were openly disclosed.
Pastor was asked if he thought a
North American Union was a bad idea.
“No,” he replied. “I don’t think a
political union of North America is an inherently bad idea, nor do I
think it is a good idea for North America right now. I teach a
course at American University in which I look at the different
options for political integration of North America, and I put the
options before the students.”
Then why is a North American Union
a bad idea right now?
“The reason the political
integration is not a good idea at this stage now, perhaps never, is
because of people like yourself who immediately begin to fear that
their sense of America could disappear,” Pastor responded. “Somehow,
if you’re fearful that America’s sovereignty will disappear, you
won’t even take small steps forward. You just get mired in the
status quo. The problem is that the world is moving very rapidly,
and you can’t stay competitive if you don’t move.”
Pastor did not reject the idea
that a North American Union could form, but only after further
continental economic integration and the development of a North
American Community in which people are able to think as citizens of
North America.
Is China the winner in the NAFTA
super-corridors being planned for North America?
“If you define trade in zero-sum
terms, China may be the winner in the transportation corridors,”
Pastor conceded. “But even in zero-sum terms, consumers benefit from
the increasing imports that give them more choice and give them more
quality. In the final analysis, we are all consumers.”
Pastor affirmed he favors
globalism.
“I believe,” he explained to WND,
“that globalization is a net plus for the world economy, for the
middle class, and for all people.”
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