The U.S. led talks which have been criticized
for their secretive nature, could be used to update aspects of existing
trade pacts among member nations. This would provide the perfect
opportunity for a backdoor renegotiation of NAFTA without officially
having to open it back up.
After expressing interest in joining
trade talks back in November 2011, NAFTA partners have been invited to
join the U.S. backed
Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP) which also includes Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, New
Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam. U.S.
Trade Representative Ron Kirk
welcomed both
Mexico and
Canada
into the TPP fold. He noted that, “Mexico has assured the United States
that it is prepared to conclude a high-standard agreement that will
include issues that were not covered in the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA).” He added, “Inviting Canada to join the TPP
negotiations presents a unique opportunity for the United States to
build upon this already dynamic trading relationship. Through TPP, we
are bringing the relationship with our largest trading partner into the
21st century.” A
joint statement
by the U.S. and Canada acknowledged that, “The TPP presents an
opportunity to conclude a high standard agreement that will build on the
commitments of NAFTA.”
The
Council of Canadians
who continue to be vocal opponents of NAFTA and other trade deals that
follow the same flawed template, are strongly against Canada’s entry
into the TPP. Its national chairperson, Maude Barlow warned that this,
“could force Canada to change its drug policies, its copyright policies,
its environmental and public health rules – all without going through
the normal parliamentary process.” The organization cautioned how, “TPP
negotiations could mean up-front concessions in a number of areas,
including intellectual property rights, where the U.S. is making
considerable demands on TPP member countries that will undermine access
to essential medicines so that its multinational drug firms can increase
profits.” They also emphasized that, “Supply management, which
guarantees fair wages and stable prices for farmers in non-exporting
sectors, is too valuable to Canada to sacrifice on a negotiating table.”
Others have pointed out that it is important as a buy-local program,
as well as key to Canada’s food security and food sovereignty. The
Council of Canadians maintains that, “the TPP is by and large a NAFTA
renegotiation but on U.S. President Obama’s terms.”
Not surprisingly, the
Canadian Council of Chief Executives,
an organization that lobbies the government on behalf of the country’s
largest corporations, welcomed the announcement that Canada has been
invited to join the TPP talks. Its President and CEO John Manley stated
that, “By signing on to the TPP, the federal government has taken an
historic leap toward securing Canada’s long-term strategic interests in
the Asia-Pacific region.” The U.S. Chamber of Commerce have also
applauded
Canada and Mexico’s entry into the TPP. Its President and CEO Thomas
Donohue argued that, “negotiating the TPP together is an excellent
strategic decision for North America.” Back in January, the
Council of the Americas
explained how, “it makes little sense for the United States to enter
into potentially significant trade arrangements with countries in the
Pacific region without our NAFTA partners.” They view the TPP as a
“promising vehicle to support the updating of our bilateral and
trilateral trading relationships within North America to the high
standards of twenty-first century free-trade agreements.”
In his article,
Will invitation to join TPP talks lead to NAFTA 2.0?,
Peter Clark one of Canada’s leading international trade strategists
concluded that, “A successful TPP would allow NAFTA to essentially be
re-opened without the optics of it actually being re-opened.” He went on
to say, “The business leaders in all three NAFTA countries, as strong
supporters of TPP invitations to Canada and Mexico, understand that
after nearly 20 years, modernization of NAFTA is needed. For rules of
origin, supply chain management and manufacturing integration.” Clark
stressed that, “All Canadians should be clear about this – TPP is the
negotiation of NAFTA 2.0 and it could have major implications for
Canada-USA trade relations.” Meanwhile, both countries are implementing
the
Beyond the Border Perimeter Security and Economic Competitiveness Action Plan which has been described as the most significant steps forward in U.S.-Canada cooperation since NAFTA.
Christopher Sands
of the Hudson Institute observed how, “The TPP negotiating agenda is at
once similar to the bilateral agenda that Canada and the United States
are pursuing, and also more ambitious and multilateral.”
In May, the TPP held its
twelfth round of negotiations
with the next set of talks scheduled to take place in San Diego,
California from July 2-10. So far, there has been a real lack of
transparency, but what is clear is that the TPP seeks to go beyond other
trade agreements. According to a
leaked text by Public Citizen,
it would expand on the investor privileges found in NAFTA, granting
corporations more power and further threatening the sovereign rights of
member nations. In the meantime, the U.S. continues to spearhead TPP
negotiations as a way of countering growing Chinese influence. The door
is open for other countries to join which is why it is considered to be a
stepping stone to a larger free trade area of the Asia-Pacific and an
important part of the international corporate globalization agenda.
Trade
deals such as NAFTA and now the TPP are being used to smuggle through a
new set of transnational corporate rights, trapping nations in a web of
treaties that further trump their own laws. All too often, these
agreements fail to deliver on the promise of prosperity and only serve
to accelerate the path towards economic enslavement. Globalization has
meant sacrificing self-sufficiency and sovereignty for foreign
dependency which is a sure path to world government.