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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
Buzzflash headline: Bush
administration set on betraying America's national security
for "bidness," As they say in Texas. He can violate the
personal liberties of Americans, but he can't cancel a
contract with a nation that has supported al-Qaeda. Bush is
a threat to our lives.
February 25, 2006
Bush Admin. Won't Reconsider Ports Deal
By DONNA DE LA CRUZ, Associated Press
Writer
The Bush administration said Friday it won't reconsider
its approval for a United Arab Emirates company to take over
significant operations at six U.S. ports. The former head of
the Sept. 11 commission said the deal "never should have
happened."
Opponents, including the agency that runs New York and
New Jersey ports, took their case to court, while the
company, Dubai Ports World, stepped up efforts to change the
minds of congressional critics.
The president's national security adviser said the White
House would keep trying to persuade lawmakers — there's more
time since the company offered to delay its takeover — but
the administration wouldn't reconsider its approval.
"There are questions raised in the Congress, and what
this delay allows is for those questions to be addressed on
the Hill," Stephen Hadley said. "There's nothing to reopen."
Thomas Kean, a former Republican governor of New Jersey
who led the bipartisan probe of the Sept. 11 attacks, said
the deal was a big mistake because of past connections
between the 2001 hijackers and the UAE.
"It shouldn't have happened, it never should have
happened," Kean said in a telephone interview with The
Associated Press.
The quicker the Bush administration can get out of the
deal, the better, he said. "There's no question that two of
the 9/11 hijackers came from there and money was laundered
through there," Kean said.
Kean acknowledged the UAE is now being helpful by
allowing the United States to dock ships in its country's
waters, and helping the U.S. with intelligence.
"From our point of view, we don't want foreigners
controlling our ports," Kean said. "From their point of
view, this is a legitimate company that had a legitimate bid
and won, and here are all these congressmen saying all these
things about not wanting this company. It looks to them like
it's anti-Arab."
"I think this deal is going to be killed," Kean said.
"The question is how much damage is this going to do to us
before it's killed."
Kean's comments threatened to overshadow moves by the
company and the White House to appease critics by delaying
the takeover.
"Governor Kean knows as much as anyone how risky it is to
deal with the United Arab Emirates," said Rep. Peter King
(news, bio, voting record), R-N.Y., chairman of the House
Homeland Security Committee and a leading opponent.
"This just proves that no real investigation was ever
conducted, and it's unfortunate that he and the other 9/11
commissioners were not contacted before the government
approved this."
The former head of the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit joined
in the criticism.
"The fact that you are putting a company in place that
could already be infiltrated by al-Qaida is a silly thing to
do," said Mike Scheuer, who headed the CIA unit until 1999.
The U.S. operations generating the protests represent
about 10 percent of a global $6.8 billion acquisition by the
state-run company.
Republicans and Democrats in Congress have denounced the
Bush administration for approving the deal through a
secretive review process designed to protect national
security in big corporate mergers.
Lawmakers led by King and Sen. Charles Schumer (news,
bio, voting record), D-N.Y., plan to introduce legislation
next week that would put the deal on hold while the
government conducts further investigation.
Hoping to forestall such legislation, Dubai Ports said
Thursday night it would postpone its action indefinitely to
give Congress more time to look at the deal.
Bush Press Secretary Scott McClellan said: "We believe
once Congress has a better understanding of the facts and
the safeguards that are in place that they will be more
comfortable with the transaction moving forward. So, a
slight delay would be helpful in that regard."
The Bush administration continued to defend the deal
Friday even as it admitted mishandling the decision-making
process.
"If there was a failure, we failed to recognize there
might be a public reaction," Treasury Secretary John Snow
told reporters in Richmond, Va. "Over time, we may recommend
improvements in the process so Congress is better informed
about transactions."
Tony Fratto, Treasury's top spokesman, said this would
not necessarily involve changing the current law, which
prohibits the review committee from briefing members of
Congress before a decision is reached.
Sen. Pete Domenici (news, bio, voting record), R-N.M.,
said much of the criticism has an anti-Arab bias.
"We are at war against terrorists, not any religion or
ethnicity. Some politicians seem to have forgotten that. ...
Such alarm, verging almost on hysteria, harms our efforts to
have the broadest coalition possible against worldwide
terrorism," Domenici said.
House GOP leaders plan to meet Tuesday to decide whether
they will still support immediate legislation to hold up the
sale.
Rep. Thomas Reynolds (news, bio, voting record), R-N.Y.,
a member of the leadership, said he is "beginning to get
what I want, which is to slow down this process so we can
take a look at it."
Lobbyists for Dubai Ports went to Capitol Hill Friday to
brief staffers. Lawmakers said the company's delay was a
positive step, but not a solution.
"I think the onus still remains with the company and for
those who approved it, to justify how this is consistent
with our national security concerns," said Rep. Vito
Fossella (news, bio, voting record), R-N.Y.
In New Jersey, the agency in charge of area ports sued to
try to block Dubai Ports from taking over operations there.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey argued in
court papers that Dubai Ports World was violating its lease
by not getting consent for its pending acquisition of the
current port operator, London-based Peninsular & Oriental
Steam Navigation Co.
New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, who is also suing over the
sale, urged other governors to join the case.
Governors of Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania have
expressed concerns about the takeover; Florida Gov. Jeb Bush
has said he trusts his brother the president on such
security issues.
___
Associated Press writers Katherine Shrader, Ted Bridis,
Liz Sidoti and Devlin Barrett in Washington and Jeffrey Gold
in Trenton, N.J., contributed to this report.
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