1st Mexican truck rolls across border under cover of
darkness
Official:
'Logistical Trans-Corridor of North
America' open for business
September 8,
2007
By Jerome R. Corsi
/
WorldNetDaily.com
The first Mexican truck authorized by a Bush
administration program opening U.S. highways to
trucking companies from south of the border crossed
into the U.S. this morning at approximately 1:50
a.m. EDT at Laredo, Texas, headed for North
Carolina, according to a report from
Trucker.com.
WND research indicates Transportes Olympic, the
Mexican trucking firm sending this morning's tractor
trailer north, was actually selected to be the first
across the border nearly six months ago, despite the
administration's "last-minute" announcement of the
carrier earlier this week – a revelation that has
been described as an example of "stealth."
The designation of Transportes Olympic actually
was made at a Feb. 22, 2007,
ceremony held in Apodaca, a municipality of the
city of Monterrey in the Mexican state Nuevo Leon,
the headquarters location of Transportes Olympic.
The government ceremony in Mexico went virtually
unreported in the U.S. media.
In attendance were
Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters,
together with her Mexican counterpart,
Luis Téllez, secretary of communications and
transportation, and
José Natividad Gonzáles Parás, governor of Nuevo
Leon.
There Peters officially blessed Transportes
Olympic as the first Mexican trucking company that
would be allowed to operate freely in the U.S. under
NAFTA.
That Transportes Olympic had been selected months
earlier was not disclosed last Thursday when
John Hill, administrator of the Federal Motor
Carrier Administration, announced Transportes
Olympic to the U.S. public.
Hill's announcement came in a dramatic, surprise
late-night telephone conference held with selected
members of the U.S. media at 9:00 p.m. EDT, after
many deadlines had past for filing Friday morning
stories.
At the February ceremony, Gov. Gonzáles Parás
took the occasion to make two other declarations
that have not been reported in the U.S. media.
In speaking to the group assembled at the
Transportes Olympic headquarters, Gonzáles Parás
announced the Trans-Texas Corridor was not just the
NAFTA Superhighway, but the "Logistical
Trans-Corridor of North America," uniting Mexico,
the U.S., and Canada.
Gonzáles Parás
next announced that the time had arrived to declare
a North American Economic Community.
Gonzáles Parás explained the
Trans-Texas Corridor was more accurately known
in Mexico as the "Logistical Trans-Corridor of North
America."
"I want to let you know how much we in this
border state of Nuevo Leon have been working with
our neighbor state of Texas," Gonzáles Parás said,
"making agreements which permit us to enrich what in
Texas is called the 'Trans-Texas Corridor,' but what
we in Mexico know as the 'Logistical Corridor of
North America.'"
"We – Canada, the United States, and Mexico –
have to perfect this Logistical Trans-Corridor of
North America for our mutual benefit," Gonzáles
Parás continued.
Gonzáles Parás expanded his vision of to include
the construction of a train and truck corridor that
would cut through the heart of North America.
In his speech, Gonzáles Parás confirmed what
WND has previously described as a new NAFTA
Superhighway, the first segment of which is the
planned four-football-fields-wide Trans-Texas
Corridor which the
Texas Department of Transportation plans to build
parallel to Interstate 35.
Explaining Nuevo Leon finds itself right at the
center of this Logistical Corridor of North America,
Gonzáles Parás said Mexico "must synchronize our
truck and train systems of transportation and our
maritime port connections" with those of the United
States, anticipating the massive quantity of freight
that will need to be carried from the ports in
Mexico on the Pacific to the heart of North America.
A report in the Mexican press added that Téllez
also used the February ceremony to announce
Presidents Felipe Calderon and George Bush had
agreed to create "an economically integrated North
America."
On Friday, after discovering the report about the
February ceremony in Mexico, WND phoned
Todd Spencer, executive vice president of the
Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association,
and read him the newspaper article.
"Unfortunately, I'm not surprised," Spencer told
WND. "This confirms what we have long believed. You
have to read what the Mexican government says in
Spanish to know what the Bush administration is
doing with Mexican trucks, or for that matter,
anything else that affects Mexico and the United
States."
"The Bush administration pursues a stealth policy
in the United States when it comes to Mexico,"
Spencer emphasized. "The Bush administration acts
like they want to hide from the American public and
from the U.S. Congress what they are really doing
behind the scenes to open our borders with Mexico."
"Put simply," Spencer continued, "the policy of
the Bush administration is to be less than honest
with the American public and Congress when it comes
to Mexico."
WND has experience which confirms Spencer's
comments.
WND was only able to break the news the
Department of Transportation Mexican truck
demonstration project was scheduled to start early
this month by reading reports in Spanish on the
Mexican government Department of Transportation's
website.
There, in Spanish, WND read statements by Mexican
Transportation Secretary Luis Téllez announcing 37
Mexican trucking companies had satisfactorily met
U.S. DOT requirements for participating in the test
and the start date was scheduled to be Sept. 1.
Throughout August, DOT and FMCSA worked furiously
behind closed doors to craft a highly technical
regulatory response to the legal requirements of
Congress.
Throughout last month, DOT and FMCSA spokesmen
maintained a policy of saying nothing to Congress or
to the U.S. media, even when directly asked when the
Mexican trucking demonstration project was scheduled
to start.
Even after Thursday's FMSCA announcement that the
DOT Mexican truck demonstration project was ready to
launch, WND continued to experience difficulties
getting any response from the Bush administration.
As recently as last Friday, WND was unable to
receive return phone calls from DOT and FMCSA
spokesmen.
As WND has previously reported, Congress in 2002
blocked the Mexican truck demonstration project by
inserting into the FY 2002 DOT appropriations bill a
prohibition against starting the project until 22
specified safety requirements had been met by FMCSA.
Last Thursday saw a flurry of activity as DOT and
FMCSA bureaucrats worked to make sure they were in
technical compliance with these Congressional
requirements.
The inspector general's report was finally
delivered to Congress, dated Thursday.
Peters wrote a sign-off letter to Vice President
Cheney just hours before Hill made his evening
telephone call naming Transportes Olympic as the
first Mexican trucking company the agency had
certified.
Spencer objected to WND that DOT and FMCSA did
not file in the Federal Register the final go-ahead
decision.
"What happened to the 10-day period for public
comment?" Spencer asked WND. "DOT and FMCSA may have
complied with the letter of the law, but they where
nowhere near complying with the spirit of what
Congress had required."
Jerome
R. Corsi is a staff reporter for WND. He
received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in
political science in 1972 and has written many books
and articles, including his latest best-seller,
"The Late Great USA." Corsi co-authored with
John O'Neill the No. 1 New York Times best-seller,
"Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out
Against John Kerry." Other books include
"Showdown with Nuclear Iran," "Black
Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the
Politics of Oil," which he co-authored with
WND columnist Craig. R. Smith, and "Atomic
Iran."