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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

‘Profits over honor’
Congress ready to establish normal trade relations with Laos, Vietnam

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By Anthony C. LoBaido
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

As U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell travels to Southeast Asia this week
to promote trade with communist Vietnam and Laos, he may speak of the time he
stepped on a sharp bamboo stick covered with buffalo dung. This form of
asymmetrical warfare made Powell and many other American soldiers quite ill.
According to Americans who oppose trade with Stalinist Laos and communist
Vietnam, the fact that Congress is considering the ratification of the
bilateral trade agreements with those two nations makes them feel perhaps
equally ill.

"The crimes committed against the people of Laos by their government are
horrible. We should be trying to oppose their wicked leadership. The Bush
administration is pressing ahead with their trade agenda anyway," says
Georgie Szendrey, a television producer at a Fox affiliate in California.
Szendrey is currently producing a video on the Hmong hilltribes of Laos,
which she hopes will educate congressional leaders about the human-rights
situation inside Laos.

"America's foreign policy elite should be speaking out against the horrible
crimes being committed against the Hmong hilltribes in Laos, and the
Montagnards in the highlands of Vietnam. Both of these hilltribes were some
of the finest allies America ever had," Szendrey said.

Persecution of Christians inside Laos, including forcing them to drink blood,
imprisonment and even murder, has been well-documented by WorldNetDaily.

Last year, former President Clinton traveled to Vietnam, where he promoted
the idea of trade between the two nations. America and Vietnam established
diplomatic relations in 1995 and signed a formal trade agreement in July of
2000. The Lao agreement was signed in December of 1998. This marked a
watershed moment in U.S. relations in the region. The European Union is
heavily involved in Indochina, a former French colony, but America lacks
influence because of the fallout from the Vietnam War. However, the U.S.
dollar holds sway as the unofficial currency of choice in Laos and
neighboring Cambodia.

Approval of the bill in Congress will be the result of years of political
infighting and negotiations between the free-trade wing of the Republican
Party, old-line Cold War believers who view sanctions as continuing the war
through economic means, and human-rights advocates.

The approval of the bilateral trade agreements, or BTA, with the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam and the Lao People’s Democratic Republic will establish
normal trade relations – in effect "most-favored-nation" status – lowering
tariffs from around 40 percent to about 3 percent. Intellectual property
rights are also addressed in the new accords.

Currently, Afghanistan, North Korea, Libya, Iraq and Cuba are the only
nations that don’t have normalized trade relations with the United States.

Mechanics of normalization

As reported by the Vientiane Times, the official communist media organ of the
Pathet Lao government, the Vietnamese and Lao BTAs are subject to different
congressional procedures for ratification. Vietnam must follow the provisions
of the 1975 Jackson-Vanik amendment, requiring annual congressional approval
of a presidential waiver allowing trade. (President Bush recently extended
the waiver for another year.) Since Laos’ government did not become communist
until December 1975, however, it falls outside the Jackson-Vanik provisions.
Thus, Vietnam’s normal-trade-relation status, if approved, will be renewable
on an annual basis. But Laos’ new trade status will be permanent from the
outset. Another impact of Vietnam’s Jackson-Vanik status is that Congress
cannot amend its trade agreement, whereas it can make changes to the Lao BTA.

Both the Vietnamese and Lao agreements are part of President Bush’s trade
agenda, introduced by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick in May.
Zoellick originally hoped to package the entire agenda together, including
fast-track, or "trade promotion authority," in an omnibus bill. Following the
defection of Sen. James Jeffords, however, Senate Democrats clarified that
they prefer to act on each item of the trade agenda separately. Bush formally
submitted the Vietnamese BTA on June 8, giving both houses of Congress 75
working days to respond. The Lao agreement has not yet been submitted, but
may well be added as an amendment to other legislation. For instance, the
proposals for NTR for Kyrgyzstan and Georgia were attached to the 2000
Miscellaneous Trade and Tariffs Bill once a consensus was reached to go ahead
with these agreements.

Approval of the Vietnamese BTA should have a smoother ride through Congress
than the Lao agreement. NTR with Vietnam enjoys clear bipartisan support from
war veterans such as Sens. John Kerry, D-Ma., Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., and John
McCain, R-Ariz. President Clinton’s landmark visit to Vietnam last year
further raised the profile of emerging relations between the former enemies.
And there is considerable interest among American businesses in investment in
Vietnam’s 80 million-person consumer market.

Laos attracts much less attention from either the political or business
standpoint, owing both to its small size and the still-unacknowledged
realities of the U.S. betrayal of the Hmong. Nevertheless, according to Ted
Posner, counsel to Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., there is "no visible opposition"
to the Lao agreement in the Senate Finance Committee; its passage appears to
be merely a matter of time and consensus building.

Some members of the House and Senate may still be tempted to attach a
non-binding "Sense of Congress" resolution to either agreement or to add
explicit conditions in the case of Laos.

The Vientiane Times stated, "Changes in the Senate make passage of hostile
amendments less likely, but the danger still exists of old-line conservatives
once again blocking a change in U.S. policy. As normal relations between the
U.S. and Southeast Asia continue to develop, however, Cold War thinking
resonates less and less, even among veterans and Asian-Americans."

The communist newspaper also criticized "supporters of Hmong-American groups
[who] formed the U.S. Congressional Forum on Laos, which has held a series of
closed-door, secretive meetings on Capitol Hill beginning in 1999. This group
has no formal link to the U.S. government but has gained support from members
of Congress, including Reps. George Radanovich, R-Calif., Dana Rohrabacher,
R-Calif., and Mark Green, R-Wis. In the Senate, Bob Smith, R-N.H., and Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., placed a hold on the appointment of a new ambassador to Laos
and signaled their opposition to the trade agreement. As a result of this
pressure, the State Department backed away from submitting the Lao BTA to
Congress in 1999 and 2000."

Opponents of relations with Vietnam and Laos have also sought to use the
issue of religious freedom as a means to defeat or postpone NTR. Both
countries restrict operations of unofficial religious groups, just as they do
independent labor unions or other local associations. In the absence of
credible information, however, it is sometimes difficult to separate actual
discrimination from politically motivated exaggerations. At hearings
conducted by the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom in
February, the majority of Vietnamese-American and academic witnesses spoke in
favor of the BTA, yet the commission (headed by former Reagan administration
official Elliott Abrams) went on record against the agreement in its May
report. The report threatened the imposition of sanctions if Vietnam and Laos
did not improve their religious freedom records, and it suggested that
ratifying the BTAs might send a signal to continue religious discrimination.
This opposition has not been echoed by mainstream human-rights organizations,
which have not taken a position on the agreements.

The communist government of Laos is also calling for increased aid from
America for de-mining efforts and treatment for Agent Orange. And,
incredibly, the Pathet Lao want America to help clean up the fallout from the
biological warfare it waged on the Hmong hilltribes. An agreement was signed
July 3 providing for collaborative research between U.S. and Vietnamese
scientists in the field of studying the effects of chemical warfare. The
Pathet Lao want to establish a similar agreement.

Both Laos and Vietnam now participate in the humanitarian de-mining program
run by the U.S. Defense and State Departments. The programs cost the American
taxpayer about $1.5 million for Laos and $1 million for Vietnam. The Mine
Action group and the European Union are also involved in de-mining efforts.
Laos holds the dubious distinction of being the most heavily bombed nation
per capita in the history of humanity.

Problems with trade

On the surface, trading with a communist nation like Laos and Vietnam may be
seen as a tool to open up the government and society to ideals of democracy.
However, that notion is readily challenged.

The Stalinist Pathet Lao have imprisoned Kerry Danes, the head trainer of the
Australian SAS Special Forces, who was handling security for a Western mining
group operating in Laos. Danes and his wife, Kay, remain locked up in Laos
while the Australian government seems powerless to help free them.

Vietnam’s robust military controls trade within the nation. It is waging a
brutal repressive campaign against the pro-West Christian Montagnard
hilltribes of the Highlands in the interior of the nation.

Assisting the entrenchment of a mutated brand of communism that is so
prevalent in the post-Cold War era, the armed forces of Vietnam have tapped
into the ideals of primitive global capitalism.

"In Vietnam, it's impossible to tell where the government ends and the
military begins. They are really the same entity," a Western Bangkok-based
military attache told WorldNetDaily.

The Vietnamese military has successfully integrated top generals into the
government, including the diplomatic corps and economic development cabinet
posts. The ambitious plans of the Vietnamese Armed Forces include the setting
up of 13 special economic free-trade zones near Vietnam's borders with the
communist countries of China, Laos and Cambodia. By the year 2013, the Army
will have transferred over 85,000 specially trained troops to these three
regions. This colonization is only the first step in establishing the
framework for hundreds of thousands of private citizens who will follow in
their footsteps.

By controlling the free-trade zones, the military will free itself from
dependence on government largess. Much in the same manner as the Khmer Rouge
of Cambodia remain in the bush, getting rich off of gems, timber, mining, gun
running, organ tissue smuggling and drug dealings, the Vietnamese army seeks
to set up its own set of military fiefdoms.

Speaking in the Vietnam Economic Times, Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van China stated,
"We're not getting involved in the economy just to make money."

Free to act independently from the state treasury, the Vietnamese army can
then use its newfound economic independence to acquire weapons and
consolidate national control over the citizenry.

However, America's trading plans in Southeast Asia are linked to a larger
plan known as the "Greater Mekong Subregion Development Scheme."

At 4,800 kilometers, the Mekong ranks as the longest waterway in all of
Southeast Asia, flowing from China's Qinghai province, which borders Tibet,
through no less than six countries. The Mekong sub-regional scheme will boost
trade and tourism and dramatically raise the level and quality of
transportation throughout Southeast Asia. The Greater Mekong Subregion Scheme
will link all of Southeast Asia from Vietnam to Burma through increased land,
sea and rail links.

Thailand, Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines have
also signed on to the scheme, as the increased trade will benefit their
nations as well. While Singapore and Brunei are extremely wealthy nations,
even by Western standards, other Southeast Asian states are not so well off.
Burma for example, has a per-capita gross domestic product of $172. Yunnan
province in southern China has a per-capita GDP of $479, while Vietnam's is
$330, Laos' $357 and Cambodia's a mere $282.

As the region's major source of development financing, and the richest nation
in all of Asia, Japan has stepped into the fray with the promise of injecting
funds to develop the Mekong Basin as a whole. Japanese Prime Minister Keizo
Obuchi called for "the need for human resource development in the Mekong
sub-region."

"The Mekong Basin is the last development frontier in the region," added
Obuchi.

U.S. support for the Hmong

“I lived in Laos; my dad worked for USAID in Vientiane and up country and had
the honor of meeting Vang Pao, Edgar "Pop" Buell and many of the courageous
and fine Hmong families. It hurts me to see us turn our backs on them after
the selfless and focussed efforts they undertook and many sacrifices they
made to help the U.S.," Randall Becker told WorldNetDaily.

Susan Mathewson in Missoula, Mont., told WND, "About 20 Hmong families garden
each year on my property. I have known some families for 20 years. Most of
the Hmong here are still hard-working, and there is little evidence of the
gang-related problems that have occurred in other areas. In fact, some of
their kids are the top students in English. Amazing, given that the parents
have such a hard time learning our language. I would love it if our local
paper would pick up on [the positive] Hmong stories, but the liberals here,
who cry out for 'diversity,' in fact, hate the Hmong. This hypocrasy [sic] is
sickening."

Russell J. Hesch, a retired U.S. Army solider who now lives in Michigan, has
vivid memories of his time in Southeast Asia 40 years ago.

"In 1961, one-fifth of the 25th Infantry Division was in Thailand waiting for
Washington to allow us to fulfill our national honor in the SEATO Treaty,"
said Hesch. "But instead, 'the care and feeding of the arms merchants' became
paramount. The war would last longer and more profits would be made both
during and after if the communist forces were allowed to infiltrate through
Laos. Indeed, today we are still paying profits to Friends of McNamara and
other members of the military industrial complex. Today, I can find no honor
in any senior civil or military officer of the U.S. Government. ... The
abandonment of the SEATO Treaty with the accompanying genocide of the Hmong
and other Asia minority groups was but a another stepping stone into the
swamp of death which is World Government. The Hmong story is a good starting
point for telling the fuller story of 'profits over honor,' which was the
hallmark of our Southeast Asia Policy from 1960 to present."




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