Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Mexican president Peña Nieto rebukes Trump over border threats

- The Washington Post

VERACRUZ, Mexico – President Enrique Peña Nieto delivered his most direct public rebuke of President Donald Trump on Thursday afternoon, in a national address that characteri­zed Mexico as willing to cooperate with the United States but not at the expense of its sovereignt­y or dignity.

Peña Nieto spoke after Trump signed an order to deploy National Guard troops to halt “a drastic surge of illegal activity on the southern border.” In the past week, Trump has accused Mexico of doing little to stop illegal migration and expressed alarm about a caravan of hundreds of Central Americans who were crossing this country to highlight the plight of migrants – threatenin­g to retaliate against Mexico if it didn’t stop the march.

Peña Nieto, speaking Thursday from the presidenti­al palace in Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto, Mexico’s president, speaks during the Banks of Mexico Associatio­n Annual Banking Convention in Acapulco, Mexico, on March 8.

City, noted that the Mexican Senate and all four leading candidates in the July 1 presidenti­al race had condemned Trump’s comments, adding: “As president of Mexico, I agree with those remarks.”

“President Trump: If you wish to reach agreements with Mexico, we stand ready, as we have proved until now, always willing to engage in a dialogue, acting in earnestnes­s, in good faith and in a constructi­ve spirit,”

Peña Nieto said. “If your recent statements are the result of frustratio­n due to domestic policy issues, [due] to your laws or to your Congress, it is to them that you should turn to, not to Mexicans.”

“We will not allow negative rhetoric to define our actions. We will act only in the best interest of Mexicans,” he said.

The address to the nation was remarkable because Peña Nieto has endured, with diplomatic courtesy and sometimes stony silence, about two years of insults and threats from Trump about Mexican immigrants, the trade relationsh­ip, border security, and the fight against drug trafficker­s.

The two neighborin­g countries and Canada are locked in tense negotiatio­ns over the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, which Trump has threatened to rip up if the United States government can’t win more favorable terms. Trump has also frequently called for constructi­on of a massive wall on the border.

In the past few decades, Mexico has become a far more cooperativ­e partner of Washington’s in fighting drug-traffickin­g, terror threats and illegal migration. But Mexican politician­s have called for reducing bilateral cooperatio­n if Trump militarize­s the border.

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