Home > Simpleton Says : watch this sale like a hawk

Simpleton Says : watch this sale like a hawk

by Open-Publishing - Tuesday 14 February 2006
4 comments

Wars and conflicts Police - Repression Governments USA

Gunman Opens Fire at Ft. Hood
LAST UPDATE: 2/13/2006 3:59:44 PM
Posted By: Jim Forsyth
This story is available on your cell phone at mobile.woai.com.

(FORT HOOD, TEXAS) — One person is in custody after a sniper opened fire on troops this morning at Ft. Hood, the country’s largest military installation, 1200 WOAI news reported this morning.

Base Public Affairs Officer Delena Kanaus says the shots were fired at morning troop formation of the 13th Corps Support Command, a unit which performs supply, transportation, and other support functions for III Corps, which is based at Ft. Hood.

Kanaus says nobody was injured in the shooting.

"The post closed all outgoing traffic today as military police searched for suspects in the shooting," Kanaus said. "Post authorities immediately locked down and secured all outgoing gates."

She says the shooting is being investigated by local and federal authorities. She could not say if the suspect is a soldier, or whether any specific individuals were targeted. She says ’several shots’ were fired but she says she didn’t know what type of weapon was used, or how many shots were fired.
Arab firm to oversee 6 U.S. ports

By TED BRIDIS
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - A company in the United Arab Emirates is poised to take over significant operations at six American ports as part of a corporate sale, leaving a country with ties to the Sept. 11 hijackers with influence over a maritime industry considered vulnerable to terrorism.

The Bush administration considers the UAE an important ally in the fight against terrorism since the suicide hijackings and is not objecting to Dubai Ports World’s purchase of London-based Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co.

The $6.8 billion sale is expected to be approved Monday. The British company is the fourth largest ports company in the world and its sale would affect commercial U.S. port operations in New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, New Orleans, Miami and Philadelphia.

DP World said it won approval from a secretive U.S. government panel that considers security risks of foreign companies buying or investing in American industry.

The U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States "thoroughly reviewed the potential transaction and concluded they had no objection," the company said in a statement to The Associated Press.

The committee earlier agreed to consider concerns about the deal as expressed by a Miami-based company, Eller & Co., according to Eller’s lawyer, Michael Kreitzer. Eller is a business partner with the British shipping giant but was not in the running to buy the ports company.

The committee, which could have recommended that President Bush block the purchase, includes representatives from the departments of Treasury, Defense, Justice, Commerce, State and Homeland Security.

The State Department describes the UAE as a vital partner in the fight against terrorism. But the UAE, a loose federation of seven emirates on the Saudi peninsula, was an important operational and financial base for the hijackers who carried out the attacks against New York and Washington, the FBI concluded.

Sen. Charles Schumer, a Democrat whose district includes the New York port, urged the administration to consider the sale carefully.

"America’s busiest ports are vital to our economy and to the international economy, and that is why they remain top terrorist targets," Schumer said. "Just as we would not outsource military operations or law enforcement duties, we should be very careful before we outsource such sensitive homeland security duties."

Last month, the White House appointed a senior DP World executive, David C. Sanborn of Virginia, to be the new administrator of the Maritime Administration of the Transportation Department. Sanborn worked as DP World’s director of operations for Europe and Latin America.

Critics of the proposed purchase said a port operator complicit in smuggling or terrorism could manipulate manifests and other records to frustrate Homeland Security’s already limited scrutiny of shipping containers and slip contraband past U.S. Customs inspectors.

"When you have a foreign government involved, you are injecting foreign national interests," Kreitzer said. "A country that may be a friend of ours today may not be on the same side tomorrow. You don’t know in advance what the politics of that country will be in the future."

Shipping experts noted that many of the world’s largest port companies are not based in the U.S., and they pointed to DP World’s strong economic interest in operating ports securely and efficiently.

"Does this pose a national security risk? I think that’s pushing the envelope," said Stephen E. Flynn, who studies maritime security at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations. "It’s not impossible to imagine one could develop an internal conspiracy, but I’d have to assign it a very low probability."

Changing management over the U.S. ports "doesn’t offer al-Qaida any opportunities it doesn’t have now," said James Lewis, who worked with the U.S. committee at the State and Commerce departments. "It’s in Dubai’s interest to make sure this runs well. There is strong economic incentive to be sure these worries never materialize."

Flynn and others said even under foreign control, U.S. ports will continue to be run by unionized American employees. "You’re not going have a bunch of UAE citizens working the docks," Flynn said. "They’re longshoremen, vested in high-paying jobs. Most of them are Archie Bunker-kind of Americans."

Peninsular and Oriental and DP World set approval by the U.S. security committee as a condition for the sale. In regulatory papers, the companies said either the committee must agree not to formally investigate the purchase or Bush must not move to block the sale for national security purposes.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, the FBI has said the money for the strikes was transferred to the hijackers primarily through the UAE’s banking system, and much of the operational planning for the attacks took place inside the UAE.

Many of the hijackers traveled to the U.S. through the UAE. Also, the hijacker who steered United Airlines flight into the World Trade Center’s south tower, Marwan al-Shehhi, was born in the UAE.

After the attacks, U.S. Treasury Department officials complained about a lack of cooperation by the UAE and other Arab countries trying to track Osama bin Laden’s bank accounts.

Forum posts

  • Does anyone realize the scope of this story? It is morning in our country and time to WAKE UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • I do not judge that approval of a UAE company to be responsible for the operation of several of our major ports is in the interest of the US. Clearly, this development does not makae one feel more secure.

    That an Executive of DP World is to serve as Administrator of the Maritime Administration of the Transportation Department gives the strongest impression of straightforward corruption. Regardless of Mr Sanborns reputation or integrity, the inevitable impression is that there would be some significant concern re the bottom line of DP World and not on the interst of the US.

    Respectfully,

    Herman Suit, MD

  • ABSOLUTE LUNACY!!!
    Krushev was right, we will sell the rope to hang ourselves with.