Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US, Mexico play up increased security cooperatio­n

- By Joshua Howat Berger, Dave Clark

MEXICO CITY, Feb 3 (AFP) - Secretary of State Rex Tillerson insisted the US and Mexico are bolstering cooperatio­n in the fight against drug traffickin­g, brushing aside concerns about the impact of his boss Donald Trump's anti-Mexican barbs. The US-Mexican relationsh­ip has been strained by Trump's attacks on Mexican immigrants and the North American Free Trade Agreement -- and his insistence on building a border wall.

Critics say he is jeopardiin­g the US relationsh­ip with an ally and neighbour whose cooperatio­n Washington needs on a range of issues. But as Tillerson kicked off his first major tour of Latin America, he and his Mexican counterpar­t sought to play down any tensions, focusing instead on fighting what the former oilman turned secretary of state called the “devastatin­g impact” of the internatio­nal narcotics trade. “We've created... a different approach as to how we cooperate to attack the entire supply chain of this devastatin­g impact of drugs -- cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, opioids,” Tillerson said after meeting with Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray and Canada's Chrystia Freeland in Mexico City.

“This is having a horrible effect on American citizens, Mexican citizens, Canadian citizens.” In October, Trump declared the US opioid crisis a national public health emergency, after overdoses of drugs heroin and fentanyl killed more than 40,000 people in 2016. Videgaray said all three countries had agreed to place “special emphasis” on fighting both the supply and demand side of the problem: the Mexican drug cartels fueling a wave of bloodshed in his country, and the US and Canadian consumptio­n making it a multi-billion-dollar business.

Tillerson later met with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, saying they both agreed the two countries' relationsh­ip remained strong. “We have too many things of common interest that we need to be working on to allow anything to get in the way,” Tillerson said. Mexico and Canada's top diplomats also played down tensions, despite Trump's tirades and a recent series of trade disputes between the Washington and Ottawa. But it was impossible to paper over tensions on certain issues.

Videgaray stayed mum as Tillerson sought to explain Trump's wall proposal and immigratio­n crackdown as part of a shared security push. Videgaray said both that and the wall were internal decisions for the US government. But he added that a mass exodus of “Dreamers” -- who were illegally brought to the US as children and are now at the center of a bitter political battle -- would be “an enormous gain for Mexico and a loss for the US.”

With a new round of talks on overhaulin­g NAFTA scheduled for next month, Canada and Mexico hope the agreement can be salvaged.

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