PREMEDITATED
MERGER
NAFTA Superhighway plans advance south
Texas governor, Mexico agree to extend Trans-Texas
Corridor
Posted: September 10, 2007
By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=57548
Official Mexican government reports reveal
Mexico has entered discussions
with the state of Texas and
top officials in the Bush administration to
extend the Trans-Texas Corridor into Mexico,
with a plan to connect through Monterrey
to the deep-water Mexican ports on the
Pacific, including
Manzanillo and Lazaro Cardenas.
The official website of the Mexican
northeastern state of Nuevo León contain multiple
reports that José Natividad
Gonzáles Parás, governor of the Mexican state of
Nuevo León, has actively discussed
with numerous U.S. government officials, including Texas
Gov. Rick Perry, Secretary
of Transportation Mary Peters
and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, the extension of the Trans-Texas Corridor
into Mexico to create what's
called a "Trans North America Corridor."
In an August trip to Mexico,
Perry made news in U.S. media by calling the
idea of building a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border
"idiocy."
Largely unreported in
the American press were meetings
Perry held in Mexico with Gonzáles
Parás in which the two discussed extending the
corridor into Mexico.
In their private meetings, the pair thoroughly
discussed extending TTC-35 into Mexico, according to a
report on the government's site.
In an interview prior to
Perry's visit,
Gonzáles Parás made it clear the extension of
TTC-35 into Mexico would be a discussed during Perry's
time there.
"We have had interaction with the
governor of Texas,"
Gonzáles Parás said. "We have had a very
productive relationship with
Rick Perry,
who is also interested in
what we can do to continue that which is known as the
Trans-Texas Corridor, that in reality is the
corridor of North America, the
Trans North America Corridor, that includes
railroads, bridges, passenger automobile highways, and
truck highway lanes."
Gonzáles Parás further explained the extension of
TTC-35 into Mexico would connect through Monterrey, a
city which he suggested would function as a hub for
truck-freight traffic. Monterrey is the capital of Nuevo
León.
"One of the themes that merited the most attention on
the part of the two governors was the
development of the infrastructure needed for the
competitive development of the region as it relates to
developing the Trans-Texas Corridor in connection with
the project we call the Corridor of Northeastern Mexico,"
the Nuevo León government website reported Gonzáles
Parás saying Sept. 1, at the conclusion of
Perry's
visit.
Gonzáles Parás is reportedly pursuing plans to
establish Monterrey as an "inland port" where
international container freight cargo, largely delivered
into Mexico via the Mexican ports on the Pacific, could
be transported via a Trans North America Corridor into
the United States via Laredo, Texas.
Once on I-35, the Mexican trucks transporting the
Chinese containers could travel north, heading toward
U.S. inland ports, such as WND has previously reported
are being established by the
Free Trade Alliance San Antonio in
San Antonio and in
Kansas City by the
Kansas City SmartPort.
On May 24,
Gonzáles Parás announced
during his recent meetings in Austin,
Perry had agreed the
envisioned Trans North America Corridor would pass
through Laredo and connect with San Antonio, just as
Mexico ultimately planned to extend the superhighway
south into Colombia.
"We have also worked in Monterrey to create an inland
port, a metropolitan center for moving rapidly the
commercial traffic from Monterrey to the inland port at
San Antonio," Gonzáles Parás said
in the state-published interview."For this strategic
project to be accomplished, we have been working with
the federal government in Mexico and well as holding
discussions with the secretary of transportation and the
secretary of state in the United States."
WND has previously reported similar comments made by
Gonzáles Parás at a Feb. 22 press conference in Mexico
that first announced Transportes Olympic had been
selected as the first trucking firm to cross the border
in the Mexican truck-demonstration project.
In speaking to the group assembled at the
company's 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 United States and
Canada.
He
next announced 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 León have been working with our
neighbor state of Texas," he 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.
He expanded his vision of a Logistical Corridor of
North America to include the construction of a train and
truck corridor that would cut through the heart of North
America.
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.
WND has also reported that at the recent
Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP)
third summit held in Montebello, Quebec,
President Bush and
Canada's Prime Minister
Stephen Harper ridiculed the
idea that SPP might result in the creation of a
North American Union or NAFTA Superhighways.
These reports in Spanish published on the Nuevo León
government website suggest that discussions
about extending TTC-35 into Mexico
are much further advanced than have been
admitted by the Bush
administration or reported upon
in the U.S.
mainstream media.