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LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 05:16 AM
Arab-owned American ports?

TODAY'S EDITORIAL

February 15, 2006


Some of the country's busiest ports -- New York, New Jersey, Baltimore and three others -- are about to become the property of the United Arab Emirates. Do we really want our major ports in the hands of an Arab country where al Qaeda recruits, travels and wires money?

The U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment, a Treasury Department-dominated group which reviews foreign investments, allows such purchases. The committee approved a $6.8 billion transaction between the ports' current British owners and Dubai Ports World, a government-owned United Arab Emirates firm. The United Arab Emirates was home to Marwan al-Shehhi, a September 11 hijacker; the country is a transit point for al Qaeda, including several other September 11 hijackers; al Qaeda's financing activities have involved the UAE; al Qaeda finds sympathizers there with ease, as it does in other Arab countries.

The Bush administration calls the United Arab Emirates an ally in the war on terror. But the UAE plays the same game Saudi Arabia does of quelching terrorists at home and turning a blind eye everywhere else.
It would be easy to caricature this sale: The purchase doesn't entail young Arab firebrands replacing longshoremen, nor would it displace American ownership. The storied British firm that currently owns them, the Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., probably isn't much better equipped against terrorist infiltration than Dubai Ports World. But then, the poor state of port security is precisely the point.
We should be improving port security in an age of terrorism, not outsourcing decisions to the highest bidder. The ports are thought to be the country's weakest homeland-security link, with good reason. Only a fraction of the nation's maritime cargoes are inspected.
This deal appears to be all about money. Dubai Ports World is "a business and its money is the same color as everyone else's, only it's got more of it," one banker told the Baltimore Sun. Where does the money come from? As a private company, Dubai Ports World's claim of 20 percent annual growth since 2001 is all but unverifiable, and its inner workings opaque. For all we know, Dubai Ports World is an undeclared arm of a foreign government.
The root question is this: Why should the United States have to gamble its port security on whether a subsidiary of the government of the United Arab Emirates happens to remain an antiterrorism ally?
The Committee on Foreign Investment is the wrong place for this decision to be made; it appears to be little more than a rubber stamp.
Sen. Chuck Schumer, New York Democrat, among others, is asking tough questions about this deal. For once, we agree with him: President Bush should overrule the committee to reject this deal. If that doesn't happen, Congress should take action. The country's ports should not be owned by foreign governments; much less governments whose territories are favored by al Qaeda.





Copyright 2006 The Washington Moonie Times

LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 05:18 AM
Dubai Company's Control of Six Ports 'Boggles the Mind'

By ALEC MAGNET - Staff Reporter of the Sun
February 15, 2006


Local lawmakers and terrorism specialists yesterday denounced the federal government's approval of a deal that would give operational control of six American sea ports - including one in New York City - to a company owned by the government of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, a country that has had ties to terrorism.

"On its face, this looks like f- insanity to me," the Republican minority leader of the City Council, James Oddo, told The New York Sun. He said he was not aware of the specifics of the deal.

The chairman of the council's Public Safety Committee, Peter Vallone Jr., a Democrat of Queens, said he is familiarizing himself with the issue, but that "it raises some legitimate concerns."

The Emirati company, Dubai Ports World, is set to acquire the London based Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, which currently operates the port, in a $6.8 million merger.

One of the terrorists who flew a plane into the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, Marwan al-Shehhi, was born in the United Arab Emirates. Other hijackers traveled through that country to America, though President Bush now considers the Emirates an ally in the war on terror.

"This shouldn't happen. It really boggles the mind," the director of the American Center for Democracy and the author of "Funding Evil: How Terrorism Is Financed - and How To Stop It," Rachel Ehrenfeld, told the Sun. She said the United Arab Emirates is "a big hub for all kinds of terrorist activities. ... We know that terrorist money is being laundered there."

The director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs, Ali Al-Ahmed, said that in addition to being a staging point for the hijackers and a place where Al Qaeda launders money, the United Arab Emirates "has been fueling the insurgency in Iraq. They have hosted a lot of the Sunni insurgent supporters and Sunni insurgents."

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LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 05:20 AM
[Continued from page 1 of 2]

He added: "If they're allowing this to happen in their country - Al Qaeda activities and Sunni insurgent in Iraq activities - why shouldn't they allow it in New York, where it's going to be more and more valuable?"

"It's the proverbial fox in the henhouse," the vice president of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, Morris Amitay, said.

Senator Schumer at a news conference on Monday called on the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff, to review the deal, which has been approved by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a federal committee composed of the secretaries of 12 federal agencies. On Monday, CNN reported that the committee had rubber-stamped the Chinese National Overseas Oil Company's failed 2005 bid to acquire the California-based oil company Unocal.

A spokeswoman for the Treasury Department, Brookly McLaughlin, said no agency on the committee objected to the deal going forward. She added that there is a higher level of scrutiny for government-owned companies. The secretary of the treasury, John Snow, heads the foreign investment committee.

Mr. Schumer said that the committee's approval "seems to have been unnecessarily fast-tracked" and requires more thorough investigation, given the Emirates' ties to terrorism in the past.

A spokeswoman for the Emerati Embassy in Washington, Farah Atassi, failed to respond to requests for comment.

The chairman of Dubai Ports World, Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, told the Guardian newspaper that references to terrorism at a general meeting of the British company's shareholders on Monday were "bad," and that such stereotyping could not be condoned.

4moreyears
02-15-2006, 06:12 AM
This is stupid of the bush administration. With terrorism a big issue, why would he chance anything by not having american companies run these ports.

BITEYOASS
02-15-2006, 08:58 AM
Get ready for Portgate!

FORD
02-15-2006, 09:25 AM
If it was anybody but the BCE, I wouldn't believe it.

Nickdfresh
02-15-2006, 09:28 AM
Republicans="money talks, public interest walks."

BigBadBrian
02-15-2006, 10:29 AM
Originally posted by Nickdfresh
Republicans="money talks, public interest walks."

That's all politicians. Anyone who thinks otherwise is severely misguided.

:gulp:

Warham
02-15-2006, 10:46 AM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
That's all politicians. Anyone who thinks otherwise is severely misguided.

:gulp:

Nick thinks otherwise, Brian.

:D

Hardrock69
02-15-2006, 12:54 PM
Close this thread. It is a dupe.

http://www.rotharmy.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=33092

Nitro Express
02-15-2006, 01:01 PM
The Chinese learned a long time ago they could get anything they wanted from us by appealing to the greed of the people who run things. So have the Mexican drug cartels.

LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 01:05 PM
Originally posted by Hardrock69
Close this thread. It is a dupe.

http://www.rotharmy.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=33092

It may very well be a dupe, HR, but the conversation seems to be here, as your's has had no replies.

This should remain open. :cool:

Nickdfresh
02-15-2006, 01:11 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
That's all politicians. Anyone who thinks otherwise is severely misguided.

:gulp:

True to some extent, but it seems to be more so on the right side of the isle lately...

Again, when you come to power promising to clean up Washington, and shit things up even worse than before, it's a little hard to escape special attention...

But there are in fact some Republicans that are at least becoming aware of this...


Originally posted by Warham
Nick thinks otherwise, Brian.

:D

Mmm yeah, mmm'kay BushEEP...:rolleyes:

LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 01:17 PM
Originally posted by Warham
Nick thinks otherwise, Brian.

:D


Isn't it funny how you seem to be an expert on Nick and myself, and who we "look up to", and what we think, yet NEVER accept any criticism levelled by us at you and your views.

You're always right, and all knowing.....

And we're always wrong.

Sounds like someone we know in office at the moment. ;)

LoungeMachine
02-15-2006, 01:18 PM
Originally posted by Nitro Express
The Chinese learned a long time ago they could get anything they wanted from us by appealing to the greed of the people who run things. So have the Mexican drug cartels.


Also sounds like today's Republican Party.

Warham
02-15-2006, 04:41 PM
Originally posted by LoungeMachine
Isn't it funny how you seem to be an expert on Nick and myself, and who we "look up to", and what we think, yet NEVER accept any criticism levelled by us at you and your views.

You're always right, and all knowing.....

And we're always wrong.

Sounds like someone we know in office at the moment. ;)

You mean 'Emperor Palpatine'?

LMAO!

You guys just crack me up.

BITEYOASS
02-15-2006, 06:13 PM
You know what, let's forget about party lines here and vote all of the incumbents out in 2006! :D