Reported
Death Of TTIP - An Abhorrent Political
Deception
By Graham Vanbergen
September
11, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "TruePublica"
- The global mainstream media have loudly hailed the
stunning success of the peoples uprising against the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership or
TTIP in the light of its demise. In the last few
years protests broke out all over Europe as the
unelected bureaucrats steamed ahead with
this unpopular trade deal, even after the results of
the largest ever consultation study in the EU
Commission’s history resulted in a 97% negative
response of 150,000 people.
The
emerging movement spawned enormous online activism
never seen before, culminating in the largest
petition in Europe’s history with a staggering
collective of over 3.2 million signatures delivered
by passionate foot-soldiers right to the epicentre
of where the political elite inhabit in the EU. The
beating heart of TTIP activism was Berlin, Paris and
London. This is not to forget the huge protest
effort made by citizens across almost all of the
EU’s major cities.
When preparing
for TTIP negotiations, 560 meetings took place
between 2012 and 2013. Just 4% were represented by
public interest and civil society. Unashamedly, the
Commission allowed 92% of all TTIP meetings to
be dominated by lobbyists and corporate trade
associations Today, these shadowy agitators amount
to over 30,000 grey suits stalking the halls of the
Commission HQ in the de facto capital of the
European Union in Brussels.
In May of
this year Wikileaks confirmed that TTIP amounted to
“a huge transfer of power from people to big
business.” Greenpeace Netherlands then
leaked 248 secret pages of the controversial
trade deal between the U.S. and EU, exposing how
environmental regulations, climate protections and
consumer rights were effectively being “bartered
away behind closed doors.” Tensions amongst civil
society rose to fever pitch with the devastating
news.
Der Spiegel
Germany wrote “Protests
Threaten Trans-Atlantic Trade Deal” as the leaks
became public. With concerted effort
activists seemingly brought the trade agreement to
the brink of collapse within days. At the same time,
Merkel’s grandly staged meeting with US President
Barack Obama in Hanover was nothing more than
showmanship. It aimed to show the strain of
negotiations, as if somehow Germany (and therefore
the EU) was going to get a better deal from TTIP and
pacify the building rage of her citizens.
As if to
rub salt into the wounds a report by
TruePublica, published in
The European Financial Review confirmed that
corruption in the EU trading bloc had now reached 14
per cent of GDP – a staggering €1 trillion. By now
70 per cent of all European citizens believe
corruption to be at the heart of their respective
governments and the EU Commission itself, and that a
corporate coup d’tat is taking the place of
democratic principles that Europe fought so hard for
over generations.
Then, out
of the blue, an unexpected announcement is made last
week. The media on all sides of the spectrum is
broadly going along with the story that French Prime
Minister Manuel Valls and German Vice Chancellor and
Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel have agreed
that negotiations between the EU and the US on TTIP,
have essentially failed. That’s it – the deal is
dead. Hoorah!
The Telegraph
– “EU’s TTIP trade deal with the US has collapsed,
says Germany”
The Independent
– “TTIP negotiations should stop, French government
says”
ZeroHedge
– “The Americans Give Us Nothing”: France
Effectively Kills TTIP’
RT
– ‘TTIP negotiations between EU and US have de facto
failed’ – German economy minister”
Not so
fast. You don’t think that the American’s are going
to let the biggest trade deal in human history fail
just because 97% of citizens reject it do you? No,
France and Germany just need a plan. After Brexit,
Britain can stay out of the firing line of the
protest movement for a while.
So, they
looked to Japan. It had the same problem with its
version of the trade deal similarly called TPP. Mass
protests broke out as the same secret meetings
gripped the political foreground. Its Prime
Minister “Shinzo Abe, instructed the coalition early
in the year not to “forcibly” proceed with the TPP
negotiations until after elections,
Kyodo News reported. Abe genuinely “feared a
voter backlash in the Upper House elections” amid
the growing scandal of a 242 page leaked document
laying bare the bones of the deal. Having been
elected June 11th, Abe now intends to force the deal
through “this fall”.
I made
enquiries with sources close to the ground on the
EU/US TTIP deal along the same lines; was this
simply a delaying tactic until after elections in
2017 for France’s Hollande and Germany’s Merkel? The
response was not wholly unexpected.
“The
seemingly early celebration of the end of TTIP has
also surprised us a bit. Despite last week’s
statements by the German and French trade ministers
and the way these have been portrayed, we are
continuing to campaign against the deal.”
In another
exchange:
“The
declarations of French and German leaders aim
to: divert attention away from CETA, reduce the
numbers in the streets of Germany on 17th
September, put TTIP on hold while elections take
place in France, Germany and the USA. The fifteenth
round of TTIP negotiations will happen in the first
week of October…This has been confirmed by our US
friends.”
I then
contacted
Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO). It
is a research and campaign group working to expose
and challenge the privileged access and influence
enjoyed by corporations and their lobby groups in EU
policy making. They have been exposing the
misinformation and propaganda of the EU Commission
for years.
The CEO
response to my same question was emphatic and quite
clear:
“Public opposition to CETA and
TTIP has led French and German leaders to please
voters with words against TTIP. Unfortunately,
the next round of TTIP negotiations is scheduled
for early October and no EU leader has publicly
said he or she will vote against CETA in the EU
Council in October. This is clearly not the end
of TTIP and CETA, just the beginning of
electoral campaigns in France and Germany.”
Germany and
France have taken the same stance as Japan on these
trade agreements, they are not dead at all – they
are lying.
I then
spoke to Peter Koenig, an economist and geopolitical
analyst. He is also former World Bank staff and
worked extensively around the world in the fields of
environment and water resources and posed the same
question. He said:
“Following a debate on PressTV Edition
Française, where I was one of the
interviewees, the focus was on the German and French
Ministers’ expressed conclusion that TTIP
negotiations failed. I wrote an article “The TTIP is
Dead”, hoping that spreading of this ‘promise’ by
the highest authorities of the two key countries in
the EU would make sure among the European populace
that any deviation from this ‘promise’ would be
perceived as a lie and receive strongest public
expressions of protest.”
“In the
meantime, it has become clear that the TTIP and TISA
‘deals’ are not at all dead. In fact, shortly after
the German and French announcements, Jean-Claude
Juncker, the unelected President of the European
Commission, declared majestically that for him the
negotiations are not dead.”
Koenig continues -There
are other means to infiltrate the TTIP into the EU,
i.e. through CETA and according to Juncker, doesn’t
need ratification of each EU members’ parliament.
Then there is TISA, the even more secret ‘trade
agreement’ between 50 countries around the globe.
TISA could easily be used to clandestinely impose
TTIP rules on Europe.”
Nick
Dearden, Director of Global Justice Now confirmed
what Peter Koenig is saying in a Guardian piece “Think
TTIP is a threat to democracy? There’s another trade
deal that’s already signed“.
“TTIP
is not alone. Its smaller sister deal between the EU
and Canada is called CETA (the Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement). CETA is just as
dangerous as TTIP; indeed it’s in the vanguard of
TTIP-style deals, because it’s already been signed
by the European commission and the Canadian
government. It now awaits ratification over the next
12 months.
The one
positive thing about CETA is that it has already
been signed and that means that we’re allowed to see
it. Its 1,500 pages show us that it’s a threat to
not only our food standards, but also the battle
against climate change, our ability to regulate big
banks to prevent another crash and our power to
renationalise industries.
CETA contains a new legal system, open only to
foreign corporations and investors. Should the
British government make a decision, say, to outlaw
dangerous chemicals, improve food safety or put
cigarettes in plain packaging, a Canadian company
can sue the British government for “unfairness”. And
by unfairness this simply means they can’t make as
much profit as they expected. The “trial” would be
held as a special tribunal, overseen by corporate
lawyers.”
What is
missing from this statement is that any American
corporation headquartered in Canada can sue any
nation in the EU via CETA for the same reasons –
namely, loss of ‘expected’ profits. They don’t
actually have to be Canadian corporations.
As Global
Justice also confirms, Canada has itself fought and
lost a plentiful and diverse range of legal cases
brought by US corporations under the North American
Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) for “outlawing
carcinogenic chemicals in petrol, reinvesting in
local communities and halting the devastation of
quarries.” If TTIP doesn’t bring this
horrific erosion of democratic power to the shores
of Europe, CETA will. ‘Brexit’ will mean for
nothing. It will be sold to the British people as a
global trade agreement which will be heralded as a
great success and supported by much of the media who
themselves have a vested interest in such deals.
In the end,
does it matter if it’s called TTIP, CETA, TISA and
the like, they are all shadowy unaccountable
acronyms designed to enrich the few via extreme
neoliberal capitalism under the guise of free trade.
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