Los Angeles Times

2 nations united by Trump’s ire

Leaders of Germany and Mexico seek a new alliance that isn’t centered on the U.S.

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum@latimes.com

MEXICO CITY — In what her government has called “a sign of solidarity,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto on Friday.

High on the agenda during her two-day state visit to Mexico will be their mutual political problem: President Trump.

From the launch of his presidenti­al campaign two years ago through his early days in the White House, Trump made Mexico his punching bag. He called Mexican immigrants criminals, pledged to tax imports from Mexico and insisted that Mexico would pay for constructi­on of a border wall.

But in recent months, he has extended his ire to a much wider circle of nations, many of which, like Mexico, are longtime U.S. allies.

That includes Germany, which the president has criticized for its trade surplus with the U.S., for resettling large numbers of Syrian migrants and for not spending enough on defense to meet its commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on.

Merkel has suggested that Trump’s pugnacious foreign policy, which includes recent criticism of U.S. allies South Korea, Australia and Qatar, as well as the mayor of London for his handling of terrorist attacks in Britain, may be fundamenta­lly altering the geopolitic­al map. Europe “can no longer rely” on its longtime friend the United States, she said at an election rally in Munich, Germany, saying people on the continent must “take our fate into our own hands.”

Merkel appears poised to do that on her visit to Mexico, where she and Peña Nieto will discuss trade and how to move forward on combating climate change after Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris agreement.

Germany’s ambassador to Mexico, Viktor Elbling, suggested the visit is in part meant to demonstrat­e his nation’s leadership on the world stage and define new alliances that aren’t centered on the United States. “The fact that she is coming to Mexico in this difficult internatio­nal political climate is a very clear sign of solidarity,” he said in a statement.

In Mexico, where many feel not only afraid of the economic ramificati­ons of Trump’s policies but also deeply offended by his rhetoric, that support is welcome.

“We need Angela on our side, to tell us that she is with us,” wrote Ivonne Melgar, a columnist at Excelsior newspaper, after a Mexican opposition leader met with Merkel in Germany this year.

Beyond seeking new political partnershi­ps, Mexico is also looking to diversify its markets. Trump’s tenure has demonstrat­ed to many leaders here that Mexico’s economy relies too much on the United States, the destinatio­n of more than 80% of Mexico’s exports.

Mexican leaders have traveled around the globe in in recent months in search of new trading partners and are hoping to significan­tly broaden an trade agreement with the European Union by the end of the year. Germany is already Mexico’s biggest European trading partner, with $18 billion in trade between them.

In the days after Trump’s election, economists warned of a recession in Mexico, and the peso’s value plummeted over his promises to “rip up” the North American Free Trade Agreement. Some manufactur­ers planning new factories here held off over fears that exports to the U.S. might become prohibitiv­ely costly.

Shortly after Trump took office, U.S.-Mexico friction worsened over disagreeme­nts about who would pay for a border wall he had promised. Peña Nieto canceled a planned visit to Washington after Trump signed an executive order calling for constructi­on of the wall and floated the idea of a 20% border tax.

But since then, neither proposal has materializ­ed.

The Trump administra­tion dramatical­ly scaled back its funding request to Congress for wall constructi­on and has not announced a plan to force Mexico to pay for the project. Trump appears to have abandoned his January call for an import tax on Mexico and other countries with which the U.S. has a trade deficit. Last month his administra­tion sent official notice to Congress that it plans to renegotiat­e NAFTA, but the twopage letter promised none of the major modificati­ons Trump had vowed.

In Mexico, there is a palpable sense of relief.

“He’s not only focused on Mexico now,” said political analyst Jose Antonio Crespo. “It’s made people here more relaxed.”

“Yes, he’s crazy,” Crespo said of Trump. “But it’s not just directed at us.”

Trump’s focus on other regions of the world, as well as the FBI investigat­ion into his campaign’s possible collusion with Russia, has shifted the spotlight away from Mexico. The economy appears to have responded, with the peso regaining so much value on the dollar that it is one of the world’s best-performing currencies this year.

 ?? Tobias Schwarz AFP/Getty Images ?? GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto in Berlin in 2016. Her visit to Mexico begins Friday.
Tobias Schwarz AFP/Getty Images GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto in Berlin in 2016. Her visit to Mexico begins Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States