Port Deal Heightens Security Concerns
Ex-9/11 Commissioner Joins Critics Blasting Ports Deal Despite Delay
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Texas Port Uneasy About Deal
Lee Cowan reports that the deal to let an Arab firm run six U.S. ports would also put the company in charge of key operations at the port of Beaumont, Texas, where most of the cargo is military.
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Bush, Congress Battle On Ports
Administration officials went to Capitol Hill to explain the deal that will allow an Arab company to operate six U.S. ports. But as Sharyl Atkisson reports, they didn't make much headway.
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UAE Port Company Controversy
The state-owned company that bought the rights to U.S. ports got into the business by starting right at home in Dubai. David Hawkins has more.
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Thomas Kean, former head of the Sept. 11 Commission. (CBS)
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Security officers for the Port Newark Container Terminal talk at the entrance to the shipping terminal in Newark, N.J., Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006. (AP)
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A cruise ship sits docked at the New York City Passenger Ship Terminal, Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006, as seen from across the Hudson River in Weehawken, N. J. (AP)
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A cargo ship is unloaded at Maryland's Port of Baltimore Thursday, Feb. 23, 2006. (AP)
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International of Brotherhood Teamsters Local 769 member David Renshaw, center, protests at the entrance to the Port of Miami Friday, Feb. 24, 2006, in Miami. (AP)
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Ports In The Storm
Controversy over plan to transfer management of six U.S. ports to a Dubai-owned company.
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Opponents, including the agency that runs New York and New Jersey ports, took their case to court, while the company, Dubai Ports World, stepped up efforts to change the minds of congressional critics.
The president's national security adviser said the White House would keep trying to persuade lawmakers. There's more time since the company offered to delay its takeover, but the administration wouldn't reconsider its approval.
"There are questions raised in the Congress, and what this delay allows is for those questions to be addressed on the Hill," Stephen Hadley said. "There's nothing to reopen."
As CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan reports, Congressman Ted Poe, R-Texas, is one of the lawmakers raising questions. He is concerned the deal would expose the world's second largest port, located in Beaumont, Texas, to a security risk.
Since one third of the U.S. Army's equipment deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan is shipped from the Beaumont port, there is growing concern there that if the takeover goes through, those who know what the Army put on board, and where it is going, would be employed by a company owned by Dubai.
"Right in the middle of homeland security issues, a port that deals in military cargo, having them [Dubai employees] have that information, doesn't seem like that's very smart," Representative Ted Poe, R-Beaumont tells Cowan.
The Army insists the port's security will not be turned over to a foreign company, and that the protections in place before will remain regardless of ownership.
Thomas Kean, a former Republican governor of New Jersey who led the bipartisan probe of the Sept. 11 attacks, said the deal was a big mistake because of past connections between the 2001 hijackers and the UAE.
"It shouldn't have happened, it never should have happened," Kean said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.
The quicker the Bush administration can get out of the deal, the better, he said. "There's no question that two of the 9/11 hijackers came from there and money was laundered through there," Kean said.
Kean acknowledged the UAE is now being helpful by allowing the United States to dock ships in its country's waters and helping the U.S. with intelligence.
"From our point of view, we don't want foreigners controlling our ports," Kean said. "From their point of view, this is a legitimate company that had a legitimate bid and won, and here are all these congressmen saying all these things about not wanting this company. It looks to them like it's anti-Arab."
"I think this deal is going to be killed," Kean said. "The question is how much damage is this going to do to us before it's killed."
Kean's comments threatened to overshadow moves by the company and the White House to appease critics by delaying the takeover.
"Governor Kean knows as much as anyone how risky it is to deal with the United Arab Emirates," said Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee and a leading opponent of the deal. "This just proves that no real investigation was ever conducted, and it's unfortunate that he and the other 9/11 commissioners were not contacted before the government approved this."
The former head of the CIA's Osama bin Laden unit joined in the criticism.
"The fact that you are putting a company in place that could already be infiltrated by al Qaeda is a silly thing to do," said Mike Scheuer, who headed the CIA unit until 1999.
The U.S. operations generating the protests represent about 10 percent of a global $6.8 billion acquisition by the state-run company.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


