Los Angeles Times

A delicate set of talks in Mexico

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson seeks to smooth relations after a year of tension.

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

MEXICO CITY — U.S. relations with Mexico have been in a tailspin for the last year over President Trump’s anti-immigrant jibes, his threats to scuttle a crucial trade pact, demands that Mexico pay for a border wall and his apparent antipathy toward Mexico’s president.

On Friday, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson assumed his now-familiar role of damage controller and held talks with Mexico’s President Enrique Peña Nieto and other senior officials in an effort to repair relations with one of the United States’ largest trading partners and, historical­ly at least, one of its closest allies.

If there were no breakthrou­ghs, there were no ruptures either after Tillerson met with the Mexican and Canadian foreign ministers, Luis Videgaray and Chrystia Freeland. All three are involved in trying to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement, a trilateral trade deal that Trump has threatened to kill.

At a news conference after the meetings, Tillerson defended Trump’s attempts to “modernize” the NAFTA agreement, and to crack down on both legal and illegal immigratio­n. He said the president wants to “clean up” the troubled U.S. immigratio­n system and “lift the cloud of uncertaint­y” on immigrants living without proper documentat­ion.

“I know it’s painful, the process,” Tillerson said as the three diplomats stood before their nations’ flags.

Freeland praised Tillerson as “an incredibly important voice in maintainin­g the rules-based internatio­nal order,” an implicit rebuff of Trump’s more freestyle flouting of diplomatic norms.

Videgaray also painted a rosy picture, telling reporters he is confident the trade talks won’t become a “chess game” with winners and losers but will produce a “winwin-win” outcome benefiting all three countries. The sixth round of NAFTA talks ended this week in Washington and will resume later this month in Mexico.

Some Mexican officials have threatened to curb cooperatio­n with Washington in the fights against illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g if the NAFTA talks collapse, but both government­s say that has not happened.

Tillerson’s visit here marked the start of a fivenation tour of Latin America and the Caribbean, his first multi-country mission in the region. He next flies to Bariloche, Argentina. From there, he continues to the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires; Lima, Peru; Bogota, Colombia; and Kingston, Jamaica.

Mexico, like much of Latin America, is at odds with the Trump administra­tion over numerous policies.

Stepped-up deportatio­n of Mexicans living in the U.S. without proper documentat­ion, for example, has a direct impact on Mexico’s economy. Last year, Mexicans working in the U.S. sent their families in Mexico nearly $28 billion in remittance­s, an amount 6.6% higher than in 2016, the Bank of Mexico reported Friday.

The bank said this was the largest sum of remittance­s on record.

Outside the marble halls of the Mexican presidenti­al compound, Los Pinos, and the Foreign Ministry, the reception for Tillerson was decidedly frosty. Protesters on the street called for his ouster, and a financial newspaper editoriali­zed that he was preaching “primal colonialis­m.”

“The question is, what else is Videgaray giving to Trump and his collaborat­ors in exchange for preserving NAFTA?” political columnist Salvador Garcia Soto wrote in El Universal newspaper.

That came partly in response to reports floated in the U.S. that Washington would make concession­s on NAFTA if Mexico allowed armed air marshals on commercial flights between the two countries.

Videgaray has denied such “quid pro quo” and said any decision on NAFTA will be carefully analyzed. But he has been criticized here for “opaque” maneuverin­g.

Tillerson “is eager to cement the security cooperatio­n relationsh­ip as much as possible so that it doesn’t get contaminat­ed by the NAFTA talks should they turn sour,” said Eric Olson, senior advisor to the Mexico Institute at the nonpartisa­n Wilson Center think tank in Washington.

“So far, the Mexican government has been a willing partner in these discussion­s,” Olson added. But that could change if no progress is made — or if a leftist president is elected in voting scheduled for July 1.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a nationalis­t from the left, is riding a surge in anti-American sentiment to lead the polls so far.

The Mexican military, meanwhile, has enjoyed unusually good relations with the Pentagon. The two nations’ military forces and intelligen­ce agencies cooperate closely on drug interdicti­on and arrests of drug cartel figures.

But Mexican officers also are worried about a backlash in or against Mexico if NAFTA collapses — or the wall is built — and are considerin­g contingenc­y plans, people with knowledge of the deliberati­ons said.

Tillerson is ‘an incredibly important voice in maintainin­g the rules-based internatio­nal order.’

— Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign minister

 ?? Photograph­s by Rebecca Blackwell Associated Press ?? TILLERSON met with his Mexican and Canadian counterpar­ts and other top Mexican officials at the start of his Latin American trip.
Photograph­s by Rebecca Blackwell Associated Press TILLERSON met with his Mexican and Canadian counterpar­ts and other top Mexican officials at the start of his Latin American trip.
 ??  ?? A PROTESTER’S signs read “Dreamers as prisoners of Donald Trump” and “Stop the deportatio­ns that separate families and cause pain, anguish, tears.”
A PROTESTER’S signs read “Dreamers as prisoners of Donald Trump” and “Stop the deportatio­ns that separate families and cause pain, anguish, tears.”

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