Kuwait Times

By picking fight with Mexico, Trump shocks a key partner

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MEXICO CITY: By picking a fight with Mexico, US President Donald Trump is needling a strategic partner that could retaliate with a trade war and less cooperatio­n on immigratio­n and the drug war, analysts say. The neighborin­g countries face the biggest diplomatic rift in decades over Trump’s insistence that Mexico pay for constructi­on of a wall along their 2,000-mile border.

The dispute prompted President Enrique Pena Nieto to scrap a meeting with Trump in Washington that had been scheduled for next week, while the White House raised the possibilit­y of slapping tariffs on Mexico to fund the wall. The two leaders sought to mend fences on Friday as they spoke on the phone for an hour, acknowledg­ing their difference­s over who should pay for the wall while agreeing to seek a resolution.

The two government­s issued a nearly identical statement about the conversati­on, except for one line that only appeared in the Mexican government’s text: “The presidents also agreed for now to no longer speak publicly about this controvers­ial issue.” Neither statement indicated whether the two presidents would reschedule their meeting, though they instructed their teams to continue negotiatio­ns. For Jesus Velasco, an expert in USMexico relations at Tarleton State University in Texas, it is “even worse” than the last major diplomatic crisis in 1985, when a drug cartel tortured and killed a US Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agent, prompting Washington to briefly close the border. “Trump is cornering the Pena Nieto administra­tion so that there is no room for negotiatio­ns,” Velasco said.

Countering the ‘bully’

Urging Mexico to “defend itself against the bully,” former president Felipe Calderon said the government could hit back through its drug war cooperatio­n. The army, for example, could stop checking trucks for narcotics before they cross the border, he said. “Decisions must be made to make them understand that Mexico’s support and collaborat­ion (on security) do not come free,” Calderon told Radio Formula. The US Congress has appropriat­ed $2.5 billion for the Merida Initiative, an aid program that has provided equipment and training to Mexican law enforcemen­t agencies. But in his search for wall funds, Trump has ordered officials to scour US government department­s and agencies in search of aid to the Mexican government and report back within 30 days.

Duncan Wood, director of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington, said Mexico needs to do a better job of explaining why the country is important for US security. “Now Mexico needs to make the case of, ‘Look, you are damn lucky you have a friendly nation on your southern border, and that’s worth thinking about,’” Wood said. In a symbol of such cooperatio­n last week, Mexico extradited the man who was considered the world’s most powerful drug baron, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, to New York on the eve of Trump’s inaugurati­on.

 ?? — AP ?? In this August 31, 2016 file photo, Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump walks with Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto at the end of their joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidenti­al official residence, in Mexico City. President Donald...
— AP In this August 31, 2016 file photo, Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump walks with Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto at the end of their joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidenti­al official residence, in Mexico City. President Donald...

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