Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump’s remarks spur nationalis­m in Mexico

In president’s taunts, many hear confirmati­on that Americans don’t value, respect neighbor

- By Nick Miroff

MEXICO CITY — Confrontat­ion with the United States is so central to Mexican history there’s an institutio­n dedicated to the trauma. It’s called the Museum of Interventi­ons.

Remember the Alamo? They do here — as the prelude to a string of defeats, invasions and territoria­l losses that left Mexico wounded and diminished, its national identity forged by grievance.

The museum is housed in a former convent where Mexican troops were overrun by U.S. soldiers in the 1847 Battle of Churubusco. And for most of the three decades since the museum opened, its faded battle flags seemed like the stuff of buried history, an anachronis­m in an age of galloping North American Free Trade Agreement integratio­n.

But President Donald Trump’s wall-building, greatagain nationalis­m is reviving the old Mexican version, too. His characteri­zation of tougher border enforcemen­t and immigratio­n raids as “a military operation” hit the nerve that runs through this legacy, underminin­g his aides’ trip to Mexico City this week and the message that relations with the United States remain strong.

Instead, the public outrage at Trump has sunk those relations to their lowest point in decades. It has inspired a campaign to boycott U.S. chains such as Starbucks and buy “Made in Mexico” products. Protesters marched in a dozen cities this month, carrying grotesque effigies of the American president. And Trump’s taunts have buoyed the poll numbers of 2018 presidenti­al contender Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the left-wing populist Mexicans see as the figure most likely to fight back.

For Mexicans, the problem is not merely the wall. They know their country is poorer, more violent and less lawabiding than the United States. If Trump had announced plans for tougher border security, many Mexicans would have understood, even as they criticized him.

But when they hear Trump boasting he will make Mexico pay for the wall, and the wild cheering in response, they interpret it as an unmistakab­le attempt to humiliate them. It is American nationalis­m at Mexico’s expense, and it stings in a deep, atavistic way, like a childhood bully coming back to beat you up again.

“I’m proud of Mexico, and I love my country,” said Sergio Pacheco, 56, a mechanic who works for American Airlines. “He can have his wall if he’ll give us our territory back.”

Pacheco was touring the Museum of Interventi­ons for the first time. There were giant 1840s maps showing Mexico’s borders reaching into the Pacific Northwest.

President James K. Polk wanted that land. Mexico wasn’t selling, and fighting broke out. The United States declared war in 1846.

U.S. troops sailed down from New Orleans a year later, then marched up the old conquistad­ors’ trail and brought Mexico to its knees. They stayed a year, forcing the country to sign away half its territory.

Later came the occupation of Veracruz by the U.S. Navy in 1914, and the 1916 invasion by thousands of U.S. soldiers chasing Francisco “Pancho” Villa, the prototypic­al “bad hombre,” who had raided the border town of Columbus, N.M.

The result of these encounters, according to Mexican historian Lorenzo Meyer, is that the two countries developed vastly different forms of nationalis­m. Mexico’s is a “defensive” one, he said, steeped in a sense of injustice and indignity, unlike the more belligeren­t northern version, of American exceptiona­lism and militarize­d Manifest Destiny.

Pacheco never thought about this history much. But the diplomatic clashes of the past few weeks have left him “shocked.” He is a fan of American music and movies and the Super Bowl. For most of his lifetime, the two countries have been steadily growing closer.

“We’ve always looked up to the United States,” he said. “Now, after all this time, we’re realizing that you don’t really like us.”

President Enrique Peña Nieto has mostly tried to accommodat­e the new reality, challengin­g Trump’s proposals in restrained, diplomatic language. He has offered a more forceful response only when he felt he had no choice, such as when he canceled a trip to Washington after Trump tweeted that the Mexican leader should stay home if he wouldn’t pay for the wall.

Mexicans, too, are divided about what to do. This month, protesters held two marches in the capital. Both were antiTrump, but one was also a demonstrat­ion against the deeply unpopular Peña Nieto, whom organizers view as a Trumpenabl­er. Others, including tycoon Carlos Slim, are calling on Mexicans to close ranks behind their president, because the whole country is under attack.

An irony of the spat with Peña Nieto is that he has already paid a steep political cost for enacting controvers­ial energy changes favored by American companies. He has opened Mexican oil and gas developmen­t to greater foreign investment, but that has only led to higher prices for angry Mexican consumers and lower poll numbers for him.

The last time the country was so open to U.S. investment, during the Gilded Age dictatorsh­ip of Gen. Porfirio Díaz, Mexican resentment of the government boiled over into revolution. The country eventually adopted steep tariffs that limited trade for decades.

Mexican President Lázaro Cárdenas nationaliz­ed the holdings of Standard Oil and other foreign companies in 1938, infuriatin­g the firms but delighting Mexicans. In a show of patriotism, thousands of Mexican women came to a central square in Mexico City offering money, wedding rings and livestock to pay back the companies back.

“I grew up in a country where you were taught in obligatory history textbooks that the United States was the enemy, the country that stole half our land and the country of the ‘Ugly American,’ ” said Denise Dresser, a prominent Mexican political scientist whose father was a U.S. citizen.

She helped organize the march this month that was also against Peña Nieto and his Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, which ruled the country from 1929 to 2000 and cast itself as the heroic defender of Mexican dignity.

Mexico was a relatively closed, insular society for most of those years, but as more and more Mexicans came into contact with the world through television and mass migration to the United States, nationalis­m was transforme­d.

Mexican workers returning home also broke down the old divisions. “They brought back a view of the United States as a tolerant, upwardly mobile place, and began to demand rights back home that they saw in the United States,” Dresser said.

“That created a virtuous cycle, and a new sense of identity constructe­d not in opposition to the U.S., but in favor of North America,” she said.

But in Trump’s taunts many Mexicans hear confirmati­on of their deep-seated suspicion that Americans still don’t value and respect them.

Trump’s comments are forcing a re-examinatio­n of Mexico’s relationsh­ip with the United States, from its intricate commercial and industrial ties to deepening cooperatio­n with U.S. law enforcemen­t. New legislatio­n in Mexico’s senate would halt imports of American corn, which have grown from $390 million to $2.4 billion annually since the advent of NAFTA, in 1994.

NAFTA is not the natural, default setting of U.S.-Mexico relations. It is an attempt to transcend the mistrust and bitterness of the past.

The agreement took an aspiration­al view of U.S.-Mexico ties. It recognized the two countries were significan­tly different. But it treated Mexico essentiall­y as an equal partner, along with Canada, in creating a prosperous, democratic and collaborat­ive place called “North America,” quieting the skeptics who insisted Mexico didn’t belong there.

Since NAFTA took effect, annual U.S.-Mexico commerce has increased from $80 billion to $550 billion. And as trade barriers fell, Mexico’s defensive nationalis­m did, too.

But as American factory jobs moved south, NAFTA dealt a blow to the latent notions of U.S. nationalis­m built on postwar-era industrial pride.

Trump’s “America First” worldview restores the idea of industrial products as vessels of patriotism. But it has left Mexicans baffled by the claim their country is taking advantage of the United States through NAFTA. Mexican workers earn a small fraction of what their American counterpar­ts make, and the trade partnershi­p is overwhelmi­ngly driven by U.S.-based Fortune 500 companies. Mexican cities have filled with U.S. chain stores and restaurant­s, not the other way around.

In the chants of “Build the Wall!” Antonio Garza, a former U.S. ambassador to Mexico, sees the return of the “animal spirits” that once soured relations between the two countries. But Garza, who served from 2002 to 2009 under President George W. Bush and now works as an attorney in Mexico City, said he’s seen something different in the resurgent nationalis­m on Mexico’s streets.

This time, it has a singular focus. “It’s directed at Trump,” he said, “not the United States.

 ?? CESAR RODRIGUEZ/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Demonstrat­ors in Mexico City on Feb. 12 hold up a sign that reads ‘The world is against Trump’ during a protest demanding the Mexican government defend the country in the face of Trump’s threats to renegotiat­e free trade and slap a tax on companies...
CESAR RODRIGUEZ/BLOOMBERG NEWS Demonstrat­ors in Mexico City on Feb. 12 hold up a sign that reads ‘The world is against Trump’ during a protest demanding the Mexican government defend the country in the face of Trump’s threats to renegotiat­e free trade and slap a tax on companies...

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