by ROCKMAN » Fri 21 Jun 2013, 09:59:10
a – The site has gone way beyond the simplicity of producing oil IMHO. In fact, I consider you comment about the TTP to be is exactly where it needs to be. I wasn’t familiar with it so I dug some facts out:
“The 2005 Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership Agreement (TPSEP or P4) is a free trade agreement among Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, and Singapore. It aims to further liberalize the economies of the Asia-Pacific region. The TPP is a proposed free trade agreement under negotiation by Australia, Brunei, Chile, Canada, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam. The TPP is ostensibly intended to be a "high-standard" agreement specifically aimed at emerging trade issues in the 21st century. These ongoing negotiations have drawn criticism and protest from the public, advocacy groups, and elected officials, in part due to the secrecy of the negotiations, the expansive scope of the agreement, and a number of controversial clauses in drafts leaked to the public. Anti-globalization advocates accuse the TPP of going far beyond the realm of tariff reduction and trade promotion, granting unprecedented power to corporations and infringing upon consumer, labor, and environmental interests.”
This is a little more than confusing to me. As seen below it would appear the TTP was designed to be a counterforce to China’s expansion, which naturally ties to their efforts to secure future energy resources. Thus this seems to be the perfect thread to discuss the TTP. But as far as a force against China there are some odd inconsistences highlighted below. From last year:
“Secretary Clinton's speech on the importance of the openness of Asian markets (read: to American goods) and of free navigation in the South China Sea (read: for the US Navy and for merchant ships carrying goods from and to the U.S.) is not news. What happened last November is. Between the APEC Summit, the EAS meeting – the first attended by representatives from the United States and Russia – and his visits to Australia and Indonesia, President Obama put forward a 21st Century containment strategy, this time aimed at the People's Republic of China. He also made the first moves in this strategy.
1) The United States and 8 more countries (Australia, Brunei, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam) have agreed on the outline of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a free trade agreement that should benefit 500 million consumers on both sides of the Ocean. Japan too has finally decided to join the TPP. The political significance of the TPP lies in the exclusion of China. Beijing's neighbors are growing wary of the rise of the PRC, and they are trying to exploit Washington's same concern.
2) A few days after the agreement on the TTP, Barack Obama announced the deployment of up to 2500 US troops in Darwin, northern Australia, and additional cooperation between the armies of the two countries. Similar steps have been agreed recently also with Vietnam and Singapore, and while Obama was making his speech in Australia, Secretary Clinton was in Manila reaffirming the strong bilateral military relationship between the US and the Philippines.”
Everyone who was aware the US has deployed its military (though a token number. Maybe a trip-wire? A somewhat scary thought IMHO) raise your hand.
“China reacted by confirming its own military drills in the Pacific and by trying to revive talks on a Sino-Japanese-South Korean free trade deal that would counterbalance the TTP; but no breakthrough is to be foreseen in the near future. On the sidelines of the EAS meeting Chinese premier Wen Jiabao had an unscheduled meeting with President Obama, in which he reportedly looked more constructive than in the past on the South China Sea sovereignty issue, according to the American press.”
The idea that the TTP was organized to confront China seems to have been lost. A number of the members of the TTP are openly trading with China on energy and other infrastructure development. Costa Rica, Viet Nam, Canada, Ecuador and perhaps Mexico in the near future (on the Pacific Rim last time I saw a map) have entered major energy trades with China. And President Obama has announced a joint naval exercise in the Pacific in 2014 with China? It seems a key component of the basic TTP structure was to develop globally enforced trade agreements between corporations and sovereigns. Given the 100’s of $billions China is investing in other countries such enforced protections would be to their benefit. Perhaps I don’t understand the details enough but even though the US has been pushing the TTP it looks ripe for China to be a major beneficiary. It would seem the TTP, with US support, would go a long way towards protecting China’s foreign energy investments in the Pacific Rim.