Posted on 02/22/2006 5:41:07 PM PST by quidnunc
Republicans, who usually have the good sense to avoid fratricide, are engaged in perhaps the most vicious intramural squabble of the Bush presidency over the deal allowing Dubai Ports World to control operations at several major U.S. seaports. The controversy ignited in an instant and has now involved virtually every prominent Republican in Washington and a bunch of Republican governors near the affected ports.
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Congressional leaders are feeling cranky and neglected. Bush is always doing stuff without telling them, and they're always grumbling he doesn't recognize that they're up for re-election this year. So, it probably feels very satisfying to push back at him for a change. And their opposition also seems like smart politics, at least superficially.
Those political calculations may make sense for today, but in the long term, this fight will harm the GOP. Republicans can't distance themselves from Bush on security issues. He's not only the head of their party; he's the commander in chief. By pouncing on this issue so quickly and joining Democrats like Chuck Schumer and Hillary Clinton, Republican leaders send a global message: They don't trust Bush. They don't trust him enough to even wait to understand the facts of the deal. They don't trust him enough to even worry that they might have their facts wrong and wind up embarrassed.
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The squabble will also irritate the president. He's tired of congressional second-guessingespecially in a case like this where GOP leaders willfully refuse to acknowledge the complexity of global diplomacy and the value of global capitalism. You don't hear the deal's critics explaining who exactly will control port security if not Dubai Ports World.
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(Excerpt) Read more at slate.com ...
Not really amazing...well thought out. Amazing the fales outrage over a non-issue.
And when, instead, he popped up with this don't-you-dare-question-me attitude that we saw with his defense of the boot-licking Miers and also with the Alberto-is-my-friend-and-I-can-put-him-on-the-SCOTUS-if-I-want-to thing, and then petulantly shakes his veto pen at Republicans (never having used it against wasteful spending or anything else) , well...
honey, that really got up my nose.
They are fighting us in world commerce in every market and are showing many signs of beginning a move into Latin America. Not just in commerce, but with large groups of military advisor's and support staffs.
They are doing exactly what they falsely accuse the U.S. of engaging in, and that would be efforting to control global commerce. They already have a huge leverage on the U.S. and we need not give them any more. They use every bit of leverage they have.
I cannot say this about any other foreign power.
Lastly, their military expenditures have risen dramatically and they have no other enemy to justify this with. Their enemy therefore, is us.
The UAE on the other hand is cooperating with us in a great number of ways. It already hosts our forward operating bases, and handle the bulk of our military cargo. They are a capitalistic society and have little oil, which has drawn them into the 21st century as a Islamic state. They are also the source of much of the moderate Islamic culture and that makes them key to success in modernizing Islam.
For all these reasons and many more, they are our friend in ways that China will never be, and has no intention to be. They do not wish us harm, in fact, just the opposite.
I think it's a preferable deal to any of the others and I hope it proceeds without further delays except to disseminate more information.
We have our home grown Jihadis as well. The UAE has been one of a small group of Islamic moderates who have befriended us. It is not right to spit in their eye.
This is a business decision that occurred between two legitimate foreign corporations who have no reason to harm us. Having said that, they are not in any better position to do so, even if they wished to.
Finally, as far as plots and infiltration, I think people have been taking the drama series "24", much to seriously, just as they did all the forensic evidence TV shows that have somehow given everybody the false idea that all the stuff they do can be done by criminologist's in every American city.
It's all simply not true and a product of a imaginative mind.
It comes to mind who will take over our shipments of war material and tanks if needed again in the Gulf?
What do we do, give them the 100 mil they donated for Katrina relief and where do we relocate our forward ops bases and CIA in the region. Kuwait and the UAE are major participants in our side of the war on terror....But I suppose one's religion should dictate who our friends are eh?
Nonsense!:-(
All that will change in time, and it already has to a great degree in the countries we are talking about.
One thing for certain, it will never change and the war on terror will certainly fail if we do not take every opportunity to effect that change. If we isolate ourselves to pretend to feel safer, the opposite will certainly be true. History proves this contention, it is a fact.
You wrote:
"All of these people working at the port will not be Americans. The parent Company will send people over to oversee operations and run management jobs. No foreign company is going to invest all that money with out having some of its own people there.
I don't know how many it would be but lets say it is just a dozen or so per port.
These people will have family back home. The terrorist know this. They can and have taken their own people hostage to blackmail them into doing their bidding and getting information about how the security and port operations here in the USA work will be one of them. They will inform them on areas of weaknesses, laxness, and schedules with regard to security. Let them know of any holes in security or workers. They will be there everyday with access to observe these operations unlike someone just stopping nearby to spy on the port which anyone can do now. After that it may be no long in the hands of the port worker. The terrorist cell will take over operations based on the information from the worker. And of course they still have his family so they can demand him to do more. Most people would be more than willing to sacrifice their lives and wouldn't care about the company he works for if his family is being threatened. This is not a far fetched scenario and is rather simple. I am sure the terrorist can come up with much better one.
It wouldn't be the company doing the terrorist attack. it would most likely be a handful of employees that came over with the parent company. The dock workers will no nothing of this until it's too late.
Why do want this deal to go through so much? What is in it for you?
There is nothing good here but to raise the risk of another terrorist attack. Giving them access to a vital avenue to our country.
Why can't you see this?"
You wrote that several days ago, and I've been thinking about it ever since.
And I think you have a point, which I see, because you explained it to me.
It's a valid point.
I don't know if it's dispositive, but it DOES give me a concern where before I didn't have one.
You're right. There IS a security risk of some magnitude. I don't know WHAT magnitude, but some. My earlier view was that there was absolutely NO security risk, at all, and that the opposition was just political hysteria.
But I see your point.
Thank you for replying.
We just need to keep a watchful eye on things now.
Who else is going to keep tabs on our government but us.
I do my best not to over blow issues. I try to make my point then leave it be. But sometimes I stay too long on it.
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