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Update on NAFTA SuperHighway
Fox News asked President Bush this question at his press conference in Quebec, Canada, on Aug. 21 after a meeting of the Security and Prosperity Partnership: "Are there plans to build some kind of superhighway connecting all three countries?" Bush did not deny this plan.
Update on U.S. Athletes at the Olympics
The U.S. Olympic Committee, which will have more than 600 people in its delegation, is planning to transport its own food for U.S. athletes because of fears about public health and food standards in China. Under rules drawn up by the International Olympic Committee, the competitors are barred from importing their own food into the athletes' village. The U.S. Olympic Committee is bypassing this rule by arranging for our athletes to eat their three daily meals at their training camp at a local university, which is outside the Olympic Park. Three cheers for the U.S. Olympic Committee for making sure that our athletes have safe food and for ignoring the criticisms of Chinese Olympic organizers. Timesonline, 2-22-08
Update on Chinese Espionage
A federal judge on March 24 sentenced a Chinese-born U.S. engineer to 24 years in prison for supplying sensitive U.S. Navy technology to China. "We will never know the full extent of the damage that Mr. Chi Mak has done to our national security," the judge wrote. Mak and his wife were arrested at Los Angeles Airport in 2005, as they were preparing to travel to China with computer disks containing encrypted technology related to the Navy's Quiet Electric Drive that was being developed for use on Navy warships and submarines. Washington Times, 3-31-08. Chi Mak admitted that China placed him 20 years earlier in the defense-industrial establishment to steal secrets. Prosecutors called him the "perfect sleeper agent"; for two decades he held a steady job with a U.S. defense contractor, which rewarded him with promotions and a security clearance. Washington Post, 4-3-08
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