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Seaport Security - Tip of the Iceberg or Another Chicken Little?
PoliPundit ^ | 2/22/2006 | DJ Drummond

Posted on 02/23/2006 4:09:43 AM PST by saveliberty

Seaport Security – Tip of the Iceberg or Another Verse From Chicken Little?

 

The proposal to sell long-term leases to six U.S. seaports to Dubai Ports World, a company from the United Arab Emirates, has raised the important question of seaport security. A great many people assume that the sale, if it goes through, would weaken US security and potentially allow terrorists access to the United States through our ports. The debate has generated a lot of noise and anger already, making it difficult to sort out the facts from the paranoia.

First, what was the reason for suggesting the deal in the first place? Basically, a British-owned company, P&O Ports, wants to sell operating leases to six of the ports it controls in the United States. And this is important when you look at the makeup of U.S. seaport operations.

There are 361 seaports in the United States. The Top 25 by freight weight (2003) are in the following locations (tonnage in ‘short tons’):

South Louisiana, LA (198.8 Million Tons)
Houston, TX (190.9 Million Tons)
New York, NY-NJ (145.9 Million Tons)
Beaumont, TX (87.5 Million Tons)
New Orleans, LA (83.8 Million Tons)
Huntington, WV (77.6 Million Tons)
Corpus Christi, TX (77.2 Million Tons)
Long Beach, CA (69.2 Million Tons)
Texas City, TX (61.3 Million Tons)
Baton Rouge, LA (61.3 Million Tons)
Plaquemines, LA (55.9 Million Tons)
Lake Charles, LA (53.4 Million Tons)
Los Angeles, CA (51.3 Million Tons)
Mobile, AL (50.2 Million Tons)
Valdez, AK (49.9 Million Tons)
Tampa, FL (48.3 Million Tons)
Pittsburgh, PA (41.7 Million Tons)
Baltimore, MD (40.2 Million Tons)
Duluth-Superior, MN-WI (38.3 Million Tons)
Philadelphia, PA (33.2 Million Tons)
St. Louis, MO-IL (32.4 Million Tons)
Pascagoula, MS (31.3 Million Tons)
Norfolk Harbor, VA (31.2 Million Tons)
Freeport, TX (30.5 Million Tons)
Portland, ME (29.2 Million Tons)

Of these, Peninsular & Oriental navigation (P&O Ports) has part or whole ownership of the operating leases in eleven of the top U.S. ports. P&O Ports is a British company based in London, which has part or whole ownership in 85 seaports worldwide. And P&O Ports has decided to divest itself of about half of its U.S. seaport investment. Why?

Because seaports are expensive and sometimes difficult to run. American seaports often have environmental and operational restrictions which annoy the lease owners and chase away capital investment. The whole reason for the leases, in actual fact, is that there are four classes of people working through the ports:

• Ship owners and operators, who want to move freight
• Property owners, who often build warehouses near the port facilities
• The Port Authority for each port; and
• Operations Management companies

At the risk of sounding trite, port operation is not all that different from running a very large grocery operation – you have to move a lot of items, some fragile, some time-sensitive, some just plain difficult to move, in a very short frame of time. You have to keep ship traffic flowing and you have to keep all kinds of inspectors and officials happy. And no one pays any attention to you, unless and until something goes wrong.

I suspect this was how the deal was pitched to the President – as a change only in operational management, with no change at all in the substance. The Department of Homeland Security still holds authority for security, with the Coast Guard and the Customs Service as the first responders to any concerns, regardless of who holds the operations lease. The individual ports each also stipulate conditions for ship traffic, cargo documentation and handling, and these are based on long experience and attention to practical feasibility. The Port of South Louisiana, for instance, the largest U.S. port in terms of tonnage, notes that the requirements and restrictions on port operations of any kind are subject to the terms agreed to by the Gulf Seaports Marine Terminal Conference, whose members are all American citizens and all with direct and specific experience in ports and shipping, represented by members of Port and Navigation authorities from thirteen separate U.S. ports or navigable waterways.

As for the fact that two of the 9/11 terrorists were from the U.A.E., this is in no way a valid indicator to pretend U.A.E. is not a staunch ally of the United States. After all, Timothy McVeigh was a U.S. citizen and served in the Army, but that hardly means that the Oklahoma City bombing was popular with or sanctioned by the U.S. Army. Same lack of logic, you see.

Also, there is a trade problem with the deal. The British held the leases without any restriction about selling them, and so it will come across to many nations as unreasonable for the United States to now say a British company must abide by a condition not stipulated to in any of the agreements, and on no better basis than the fear that an ally of the United States would fail to use good judgment in their oversight of DP World. Imagine, as a counterpoint, if the People’s Republic of China retaliated by demanding the immediate redemption of U.S. Treasury Bonds in specie. No, that condition is not mentioned anywhere in the bond sales, but if national interest without evidence can be so used, what would stop China from making just such a demand?

Also, there is an historical component to the deal. Most Americans do not realize that foreign investment was not only common to the early American industry, but was actually essential. More than seventy percent of the First Bank of the United States was owned by foreign investment, at a time when such investment could easily have led to manipulation of U.S. policies. So too the case for our railroads, which were largely made possible by capital investment by other countries. So, foreign ownership of strategic resources is by no means new or unreasonable in most cases.

Yet I am not willing to say we should rubber-stamp the deal. I do not think it is right to immediately castigate the deal, but neither do I agree that we should ignore the action. Certainly, it is a good idea to explain how the operating lease works, what must be done by the buyer to protect security and what prevents the buyer from causing or allowing actions which put the United States in danger. I am one of those people who believes the U.A.E. is a good ally to America, who should be encouraged to invest here and take part in our mutual future. Yet I also believe it is best for the foreign investor, whatever his homeland, to be transparent about his intention and policies.

It is also important to understand the scale of our danger, however. The Department of Transportation notes that freight comes into and out from the United States in a number of ways, including seaports but also airports, trucks, and rail. So in addition to ships, you have to worry about trains, planes, trucks and automobiles bringing in bad people and dangerous weapons. And as for the ports, I personally worry less about the most significant ports, which also attract the bulk of attention from law enforcement and the DHS, than I do about the hundreds of small ports which get very little attention at all. If I was going to sneak in a WMD, for example, I wouldn’t try New York or Houston or Long Beach, but rather one of the places no one ever thinks about. Just like the coyotes who have been bringing illegals across the border have done for more than a century.

And let’s not forget about who could be helping terrorists besides port lease operators. Remember I mentioned that ports have a lot of warehouses in their territory? Well, those warehouses are not inspected nearly as closely as the cargo coming in through the port. In fact, if I wanted to have a chemical weapon go off at, say, the Port of Houston, instead of trying to sneak it in through the Port, I would just truck it in over the border, park the trailer in one of the port warehouses, and boom. Or, I could just rent storage near one of the major airports, if I preferred, say, to take out Bush Intercontinental Airport. Not that hard to do, because there is a lot of unmonitored storage space at seaports, docks, airports, and railyards.

And let’s not get too happy on the idea that Arab countries are the only source of terrorism. Sure, the Jihadists are a pretty nasty bunch, but let’s not forget that Spain’s home-grown ETA helped plan and carry out the Madrid bombing, and that British Muslims helped carry out the London bombing. So we really don’t need to worry about the U.A.E., whose doctrine and policies have always been very pro-U.S., when we can find so many dangerous types very close to home.

I still haven’t made up my mind about whether the deal is a good idea or a bad one. But we should try to keep separate the assumptions from the facts, and the prejudice from better judgment.

UPDATE: I have heard from a reader that DP World bought out P&O Ports, and the leases came with the deal. If so, that complicates the issue by another factor. -- DJ Drummond



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: gwot; ports; uae
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To: cripplecreek

I must have been working as I have not encountered the charge that it's opposed only by democrats and that anyone who questions it must be a racist.

But I ask you why the President says that he would veto any effort to kill the deal? Everyone is human, no one is perfect, but do you really think, after all of the lengths that he took with NSA surveillance of terrorists, that he would exercise his first veto on this if he weren't convinced that there was a very good reason to keep the deal?

As for supporting terrorism, if you think about it, we have no control on any money in any exchange once it leaves our hands. But doesn't it reflect as a good sign when the administration demanded and received a refund for the monies held in escrow for the PA when they elected Hamas?


21 posted on 02/23/2006 4:47:58 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: saveliberty
For once, Novak wasn't just projecting.

Yep. Even a blind sow finds an acorn every now and again.

22 posted on 02/23/2006 4:48:00 AM PST by Brandon
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To: GarySpFc

Or we don't know what's going on behind the scenes and it's contributing to hysteria.

I don't think for one minute that the President would be lax in our security. Not one. I don't agree with the guest worker program, but I don't disrespect the President because we disagree.


23 posted on 02/23/2006 4:50:11 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: Brandon

LOL! Well done!


24 posted on 02/23/2006 4:50:28 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: saveliberty
It's stupid for pubbies to climb into bed with the likes of Chucky, Hillary and Biden et al over this port security issue. Get the facts, screw your heads on straight pubbies. With the Mexican and Canadian borders easy to penetrate, we're worried about al Qaeda attempting to breach US Customs and Coast Guard security at ports?

Republicans in congress are playing into the hands of the democrats. NEVER side with the democrats. They do not have the best interest of the country at heart. THEY ONLY WANT TO REGAIN POWER IN UPCOMING ELECTIONS. Don't help them portrait the administration as either incompetent or worse callous to national security interest.
25 posted on 02/23/2006 4:52:28 AM PST by aligncare (Watergate killed journalism)
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To: aligncare

It's always important to question the motivation of democrats. And it's just as important to get the facts straight.

But I will agree to disagree with you that there's no issue in which we can agree with the Dems. I haven't seen one lately, but I won't get weirded out if I find one. I have found agreement with liberals who don't speak for the Democratic party, such as one liberal who wrote an editorial in the LA Times that vouchers were good but that the DNC had to oppose what would help struggling families because of the allegiance to teachers' unions.

Or when Mickey Kaus wrote that government welfare creates permanent underclasses.

Now these aren't the elites in the DNC to be sure, but I will try not to be knee jerk in opposing everything they say, especially when I don't compromise my values when they say something that I inherently agree with.


26 posted on 02/23/2006 4:58:34 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: saveliberty

Welcoming Terror to U.S. Ports
By Rachel Ehrenfeld and Paul E. Vallely
FrontPageMagazine.com | February 23, 2006

President George W. Bush justifies the sale of the private British company that manages six U.S. ports to the government owned Dubai Ports World, saying that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is a close ally of the U.S. in the war on terror. Indeed, the Jebel Ali terminal in Dubai transports at least 40% of US supplies to the troops in Iraq. Having the deepest port in the Persian Gulf, Dubai is critical for U.S. naval operations in the region. The UAE also provides air bases to support U.S. warplanes and stores materiel for U.S. forces. Moreover, it is also a major market for U.S. arms.


Not surprisingly, the President threatens to veto any legislation to block the deal and challenges lawmakers to “step up and explain why a Middle Eastern company is held to a different standard" than the British company that ran the ports before.



There are many important differences. To begin with, a private company based in the U.K. a Western democracy with troops fighting along with U.S. soldiers in Iraq, contrasts sharply with the UAE, which supported al-Qaeda, sent 9/11 terrorists and funding, and continues to support Palestinian suicide bombers and particularly HAMAS, which President Bush calls “a terrorist organization.”



On July 27, 2005, the Palestinian Information Center carried a public HAMAS statement thanking the UAE for it’s “unstinting support.” The statement said: “We highly appreciate his highness Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Bin Sultan Al-Nahyan (UAE president) in particular and the UAE people and government in general for their limitless support…that contributed more to consolidating our people's resoluteness in the face of the Israeli occupation".



The HAMAS statement continued: "the sisterly UAE had… never hesitated in providing aid for our Mujahid people pertaining to rebuilding their houses demolished by the IOF… The UAE also spared no effort to offer financial and material aids to the Palestinian charitable societies." Indeed, as documented by the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S), HAMAS charitable societies,” are known as integral parts of the HAMAS infrastructure, and are outlawed by Israel and the U.S.



The HAMAS statement included a special tribute: "One can never forget the generous donations of the late Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan,” the father of the current UAE president. Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al Nahayan of Abu Dhabi, was the first Arab leader to understand the importance of waging economic Jihad against the West, and was the first to use oil as a political weapon following the Yom Kippur War in 1973. On the eve of the 1991 Gulf War he branded the United States “our number two enemy” after Israel.



The multi-billionaire Sheikh Zayed, was an early patron of the PLO, and from the 1970’s until his death in 2004, contributed millions of dollars to the terror agenda of the PLO, HAMAS and Islamic Jihad.



Human Appeal International, a UAE government-operated “charitable” organization, whose board includes the UAE president, funds HAMAS as well as other Palestinian organizations, “martyrs,” Palestinian terrorists in Israeli prisons and their families. The HAI’s modus operandi is to transfer money to the Palestinian Red Crescent Organization whose West Bank and Gaza branches are operated by HAMAS. They, in turn, distribute the money to HAMAS “charities.”



For example, according to the Orient Research Center in Toronto, Canada, the UAE “compensation” plan for the Palestinian intifada in 2001 included $3,000 for every Palestinian shaheed, $2,000 for his family, $1,500 for those detained by Israel, $1,200 for each orphan. In addition, families of those terrorists whose homes Israel demolished each received $10,000.



Also in 2001, in support of the martyr’s families in the Palestinian intifada, two telethons were organized in the UAE. “We Are All Palestinians” raised 135 million dirham, or $36.8 million, and “For Your Sake Palestine” raised 350 million dirham, or $95.3 million.



According to a detailed report on March 25, 2005, in the Palestinian daily Al Hayat al-Jadeeda, the UAE Friends Society transferred $475,000, through the UAE Red Crescent, to West Bank “charitable” organizations in Hebron, Jenin, Nablus and Tulkarem to distribute to the families of “martyrs,” orphans, imprisoned Palestinians and others.



The Palestinian newspaper Al-Ayyam reported on March 22, 2005, that in 2004 the UAE Red Crescent donated $2 million to HAMAS “charities” to be distributed to 3,158 terrorists’ orphans.



On February 15, 2005, the HAMAS website reported on funds transferred from HAI to two HAMAS front organizations in the West Bank, IQRA and Rifdah, which Israel had outlawed. And last July, Osama Zaki Muhammad Bashiti of Khan Younis in Gaza was arrested as he returned from the UAE, for often transferring funds of as much as $200,000 at a time to the Gaza HAMAS branch. The suicide bombing and attacks, including one mortar attack on Gush Katif, caused the death of 44 Israeli civilians and dozens of injuries.



The UAE support of HAMAS is in line with the agenda promoted by the late Sheikh Zayed. His Zayed Center for International Coordination and Followup, founded in 1999 as the official Arab League think-tank, was shuttered under international pressure in 2003. It championed Holocaust deniers like Thierry Meyssan and Roger Garaudy and provided a platform for anti-Western, anti-Christian and anti-Jewish extremists like Saudi economist Dr. Yussuf Abdallah Al Zamel, who blamed the war in Iraq on "radical Zionist and right-wing Christian" influence.



Although UAE foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahayan stated that the Emirates have been and remain a “strong ally of the U.S. in combating terrorism,” its continuing support of HAMAS and other Islamist organizations contradict his statement. This legitimately raises concerns about trusting U.S. ports to UAE management.


27 posted on 02/23/2006 5:01:27 AM PST by conservativecorner
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To: saveliberty

The president himself said that he didn't even know about the deal untill it hit the news yet he would veto any attempt to stop it.


28 posted on 02/23/2006 5:02:16 AM PST by cripplecreek (Never a minigun handy when you need one.)
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To: conservativecorner

So where's your input


29 posted on 02/23/2006 5:03:36 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: cripplecreek

And why


30 posted on 02/23/2006 5:03:49 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: saveliberty
Yes, but you must remember politics. There's an election coming up. The dems use every single issue as a bludgeon. Don't help them beat up the administration on this issue. Dubai IS a good ally in the WOT; and we need allies in the Middle East.
31 posted on 02/23/2006 5:04:05 AM PST by aligncare (Watergate killed journalism)
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To: saveliberty

Bush’s Port Jihad
By Robert Spencer
FrontPageMagazine.com | February 23, 2006

It’s shaping up to be a major political battle: Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, House Speaker Dennis Hastert and House Majority Leader John Boehner have all lined up against President Bush’s plan to turn over operation of six major American ports to a company based in the United Arab Emirates.


The President is threatening to veto any attempt to block the plan. Referring to the fact that the company in question, the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company, has been British-owned up to its impending sale to Dubai Ports World, he said Tuesday: “I want those who are questioning it to step up and explain why all of a sudden a Middle Eastern company is held to a different standard than a Great British company. I am trying to conduct foreign policy now by saying to the people of the world, ‘We’ll treat you fairly.’”

This is staggeringly unrealistic, and reflects the dangers of the Administration’s continuing unwillingness or inability to come to grips with the full dimensions of the jihad threat. That Bush feels compelled to say “to the people of the world, ‘We’ll treat you fairly’” betrays a peculiar insecurity where he should display a robust and unapologetic self-confidence. He is trying to demonstrate to a world awash in anti-Americanism that America is not as bad as all that, but in doing so he only lends credence to the anti-American charges (for if there weren’t substance to them, after all, why would he feel the need for the gesture?) and manifests the mistaken belief that “they hate us” because of something we have done, which we can undo with the proper display of good will. In this he again shows complete unawareness of the jihad ideology which remains constant while the pretexts and grievances that fuel it shift. No amount of good will can possibly efface the jihad imperative to subjugate the world under the rule of Islamic law, which is the avowed program of jihadists everywhere.



The UAE may be the most reliable ally the United States has ever had (and of course it isn’t remotely that) and there would still be no way for it to ensure that Dubai Ports World hires no one with jihadist sentiments. The situation in the Islamic world makes it quite likely that Dubai Ports World will be sending at least a few mujahedin to work in these American ports, and that they will be able to work there unhindered. The 9/11 hijackers used the UAE as a base of operations and source of financial support; have Emirati authorities cleared the country of jihad sentiment since then? On what basis can this be assumed?



After all, no one even in Washington is yet even asking the right questions of self-proclaimed moderates about where they really stand on jihad and Sharia issues. Officials in Washington and Europe have shown no awareness of the fact that it isn’t enough to have no ties to terror groups; a Muslim who nonetheless believes in the jihad ideology of Islamic supremacism and the subjugation of infidels is still susceptible to jihadist recruitment. Is it possible to determine whether such recruitment is likely or not in the case of any particular individual? No -- and that’s why turning over any ports to Dubai Ports World is ill-advised: the potential for jihadist infiltration is just too great. Why is a Middle Eastern company held to a standard different from that to which a British company is held? Obviously a British firm these days could employ a jihadist also, but the likelihood of this is smaller, as British Muslims still constitute a small minority of the population.


Some have argued that this deal has been blown way out of proportion, and that security for the ports will remain in American hands. Even if that is true, however, the arrangement with Dubai Ports World should be ended immediately, if only for its symbolic value. Rather than bend over backward to show the Muslim nations of the world that he trusts them, President Bush would do more for American national security by explaining why such trust would be misplaced at this time, and calling upon those nations to manifest their trustworthiness with forthright and unambiguous anti-jihad actions within their borders -- including an ending of all discrimination against non-Muslims and of the teaching of the idea that the Islamic social order must be imposed by force over Jews, Christians, and others. If the President were calling for the UAE to adopt such measures, he would be under no illusions about where that country really stands.



Frist, Hastert, and Boehner are right. Why would Bush want to be so obstinate on this? Doesn’t he realize that it does immense damage to his position as being tougher on Islamic terrorism than his opponents? On cue, Hillary Clinton has already spoken about introducing legislation to stop the deal. The President risks allowing the Democrats an opportunity to show that they are tougher on terrorism than he is – which, since it isn’t true, if a Democrat is actually elected in 2008, could lead to the destruction of the entire anti-terror resistance, as imperfect as it has been.



If this deal goes through, will the United States have the luxury of undoing it before it undoes us?


32 posted on 02/23/2006 5:04:24 AM PST by conservativecorner
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To: saveliberty
Many of us were overly concerned when the ports question first came out because it was reported that security was involved. It now seems to be a tempest-in-a-toilet bowl stirred up by Democrats and some Republicans who did not get the story right. In the case of the anti-American Democrats and socialists in Congress and in the media, they have been looking for an issue to jump on.

Democrats running for office desperately need something to yell about that will give the impression that they are moving more to the center and away from the extreme left..

This is all caused by the White House not explaining what is going on. This in turn is a part of the per chant of our ruling elite, Democrat or Republican, to feel that they are above having to explain themselves to the "people out there."

Our ruling elite are, by the average America's standards, the wealthy class. Wealthy people, as a rule, do not feel answerable to lesser folks.

The Bush administration has handed the socialists an issue on a silver platter that they will pursue to the bitter end in an effort to retake power.

the Bush administration is doing many of the right things but it had better begin to take the American people into consideration. After all, Bush is our employee and employees must be supervised.
33 posted on 02/23/2006 5:04:36 AM PST by R.W.Ratikal
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To: aligncare

We are in agreement, I was just making the point to have the facts straight, which I think you are saying too.


34 posted on 02/23/2006 5:05:42 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: conservativecorner

Again, where are your thoughts? Why won't you just link and then tell us what you think?

If you want to just post articles, why not post separate threads for each? Did you read DJ's article or do you just want to let us know that you are concerned and you don't trust Bush but you won't tell us whom you do trust so that we can decide for ourselves whether we agree with you?


35 posted on 02/23/2006 5:07:19 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: saveliberty

I just think we need to take a good long look at the whole thing.


36 posted on 02/23/2006 5:07:30 AM PST by cripplecreek (Never a minigun handy when you need one.)
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To: R.W.Ratikal

That's an interesting view, thanks, R.W. Ratikal! (Love your FR name! LOL!)


37 posted on 02/23/2006 5:08:34 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: cripplecreek

We agree, I'd just like it to happen without panic


38 posted on 02/23/2006 5:09:09 AM PST by saveliberty (Snowflake and Bushbot)
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To: Perdogg

Actually it will be if we turn down the deal. With as widely and loudly argued as this is, the ME just might find justification to retaliate on the economic front. Turning down the deal could jeopardize our National Security on a much larger scale.


39 posted on 02/23/2006 5:09:38 AM PST by EBH (Islam is not a religion, it is a Theocracy. The sooner ya'll understand that the better.)
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To: saveliberty

"On July 27, 2005, the Palestinian Information Center carried a public HAMAS statement thanking the UAE for it’s “unstinting support.”


40 posted on 02/23/2006 5:11:18 AM PST by conservativecorner
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