The US secretaries of state and homeland security meet with Mexico’s president on Thursday, seeking to ease diplomatic tensions over President Donald Trump’s trade and immigration policies.
With the countries’ relations at their most strained in years, President Enrique Pena Nieto will host US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security chief John Kelly.
Trump has angered Mexico by vowing to build a wall to keep out migrants from Latin America and revise trade relations. During his election campaign, Trump branded immigrants from Mexico rapists and criminals.
Pena Nieto last month canceled a meeting after Trump insisted he would make Mexico pay for the wall.
The US State Department said in a statement the officials will discuss “border security, law enforcement cooperation, and trade, among other issues.”
Mexico, which announced the visit last week, said it was aimed at building “a respectful, close and constructive relationship between the two countries.”
Tillerson and Kelly will also meet with Mexico’s ministers of the interior, foreign affairs, finance, defense and the navy, US government statements said.
US immigration authorities have arrested hundreds of people across the country as part of Trump’s pledge to crack down on people, mostly Latinos, who are in the country illegally.
Kelly on Tuesday issued new orders to authorities to begin arresting and deporting illegal immigrants.
Mexico could use border cooperation as a card in negotiations.
“We have been a great ally to fight problems with migration, narcotics,” warned Mexico’s economy secretary Ildefonso Guajardo in an interview with Canadian newspaper the Globe and Mail.
“If at some point in time things become so badly managed in the relationship, the incentives for the Mexican people to keep on cooperating in things that are at the heart of (US) national security issues will be diminished.”
Source: AFP