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Clinton
to address trade and turmoil in Mexico
………Click Here For Original Article
Mexico's growing problems take center stage this week as a parade of U.S.
Cabinet members start to descend on Mexico City before next month's visit by
President Obama.
CRIME: Mexicans weary of drug war
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will arrive Wednesday and meet
with Mexican President Felipe Calderón during a two-day trip to Mexico City
and the northern city of Monterrey, trying to find common ground on
contentious issues such as border violence and trade rules.
"We have a number of speed bumps in the relationship," said Harley Shaiken,
director of the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of
California-Berkeley. "The visit is meant to flatten them."
The issue grabbing the most attention, Shaiken said, is Mexico's crackdown
on drug cartels, which has unleashed a wave of brutal murders in the border
cities of Tijuana and Juárez.
Cartel violence killed 6,290 people across Mexico last year and more than
1,000 in the first eight weeks of 2009, according to Mexico's government.
Some of the violence has spilled into the USA, where Mexican drug cartels
are believed to operate in 230 cities, according to a recent U.S. Justice
Department report. Mexico has accused U.S. authorities of doing little to
reduce drug use and interrupt the flow of drugs within the USA, even as
thousands of Mexican troops fill the deserts and search cars at checkpoints
along Mexico's interstates.
The United States has cut funding for the Merida Initiative, an aid package
aimed at helping Mexico's drug fight. Congress recently trimmed the first
chunk of aid to $300 million from $450 million.
Mexico wants the United States to restrict the sale of guns, which can end
up in the hands of Mexican smugglers.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano earlier told USA TODAY that the
United States plans to send a large contingent of federal agents to the
border, but how many and how much will be spent are still to be announced.
Obama is likely to unveil more anti-crime proposals, said Raúl Brangas, a
professor of international relations at the University of the Americas in
Puebla, Mexico. "He's seen the importance of having a safer border," Brangas
said.
Napolitano and Attorney General Eric Holder have visits scheduled to Mexico
next month before Obama's visit April 16-17.
Trade has become another flash point between the countries that share a
2,000-mile border. As U.S. companies struggle in the economic downturn,
Mexico is afraid the United States may become more protectionist and
backslide on the North American Free Trade Agreement, said Amy Glover, a
member of Mexico's Council on Foreign Relations.
"One of the issues that will have to be raised is respect for NAFTA," Glover
said.
During thepresidential campaign, both Obama and Clinton said they wanted to
renegotiate the 1994 trade pact with Mexico and Canada to better protect
U.S. workers.
This month, Congress challenged NAFTA by canceling funding for a pilot
program that would allow Mexican trucks to travel on U.S. highways.
Mexico retaliated Thursday by slapping tariffs of 10%-45% on U.S. goods
ranging from California almonds to Venetian blinds made in New Jersey.
Mexico is the United States' biggest trade customer after Canada, and the
sanctions could affect $2.4 billion in U.S. exports.
Mexican officials want to talk to about joint strategies to jump-start both
nations' economies, Glover said.
U.S. manufacturers employ thousands of people at their Mexican factories. In
recent weeks, U.S. automakers have shut down factories in Saltillo, Toluca
and other Mexican cities because of slumping sales. About 43,500 Mexicans
work in auto plants, and thousands more for auto parts suppliers.
One hot topic during the Bush administration will probably be missing from
the agenda this time: changes to U.S. laws to legalize millions of illegal
immigrants, said S. Lynne Walker of the Institute of the Americas, a think
tank in La Jolla, Calif., that specializes in Latin American economic
issues.
"Any time there's a serious economic downturn, there's no way the United
States can talk about immigration reform," Walker said. "Americans are
standing in line for jobs … so it's just not going to fly, politically."
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