Posted on 01/12/2004 3:19:40 PM PST by Happy2BMe
MONTERREY, Mexico President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox, their relationship strained by tensions over immigration and Iraq, met privately for talks on a range of issues Monday as a prelude to an international summit meeting of 34 Western Hemisphere nations.
The Bush White House saw the face-to-face meeting not only as a chance to mend ties between the two countries, but also to earn political capital for a president who wants a second term.
Bush arrived in this industrial city at midday at an airport where gun-toting troops in green fatigues and security officers roamed the grounds. He and his wife, Laura, walked down into a phalanx of Mexican officials, all men wearing dark suits.
The couple were followed in the procession of greeting by Secretary of State Colin Powell, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and White House chief of staff Andy Card. Once in his motorcade, Bush passed large expanses of brush and cactus- covered land. Men digging ditches alongside the road stopped and leaned on their tools to watch him pass by.
On a 90-minute flight here from Texas, Bush got a briefing from Rice and Powell on the summit, said his press secretary, Scott McClellan.
In his meeting with Fox, the spokesman said, the president was expected to discuss his new, more open immigration policy, strengthening border security and free trade. McCellan dismissed talk of the meeting as an opportunity to air grievances.
"We have a good relationship with Mexico, and President Fox is a good friend of the president's", McClellan said. "Whatever differences we had in the past, we have a lot of common challenges that we are working closely together on."
Sorry, Castro
Bush annoyed Fox when he put changes in immigration on the back burner after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks. Their relationship further soured when Mexico failed to back the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. But the two were expected to be smiling, at least for the cameras, at the summit of freely elected leaders. Cuba was not invited.
"Fox has an opportunity to hail the Bush immigration proposal as a political victory, given that he has been asking for an immigration agreement since day one," said Armand Peschard-Sverdrup, director of the Mexico project at Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "I think to some extent, Bush will use it as a photo op for reaching out to the Hispanic voters."
Amid the congenial handshakes will be disagreements. Latin American nations butted heads with the United States until nearly dawn Sunday in failing to agree on several points of a draft document to be debated at the two-day summit.
Bigger Than NAFTA
The United States wants the draft to call for re-emphasizing a 2005 deadline for finishing negotiations on a Free Trade Area of the Americas, a hemisphere-wide trade zone that is one of Bush's top policy goals for Latin America. Brazil and Venezuela say the summit is not the place to discuss it.
The United States also wants to kick corrupt governments out of the Organization of American States, a move opposed by several Latin American nations.
Other discussion topics at the summit, held in Mexico's third-largest city, 150 miles south of the Texas border city of Laredo, include strengthening free republics, ending poverty, security and helping small businesses with low-interest loans.
Argentina's President Nestor Kirchner is upset about recent U.S. criticism over its warming relations with Cuba. U.S. officials privately worry that President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, who warned U.S. officials on Saturday not to "stick their noses" in his nation's affairs, is working with Cuba to oppose pro-American republics in the region.
200 Million More on the U.S. Taxpayers' Dole?!
Some Latin American leaders accuse America of being heavy-handed. They argue that the United States has neglected social issues, such as raising the standard of living for 200 million people, nearly one-half the region's population, who live in poverty.
Between bilateral meetings Monday with President Ricardo Lagos of Chile and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Bush's schedule called for his speech at the summit's opening ceremonies. He planned to promote free trade, open markets, clean elections and anti-corruption steps to help strengthen freedom in the hemisphere.
An administration official said the United States also planned to announce it would return to Peru $20 million allegedly stolen by Vladimiro Montesinos, a former Peruvian intelligence chief, and stashed in American bank accounts.
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
We may have a winner here . .
The red carpet treatment leaves witnesses.
That also was a message from NPR talking heads today.
ILLEGAL
Talk to as US Postal window clerk . . ask what every third transaction at the window is.
Answer: International money orders to Mexico.
It goes out by the Billion$ every two weeks, just like clockwork.
"The red carpet treatment leaves witnesses."
It also requires flight authorization and in the case of foreign government heads, a notice to our state department along with a travel plan.
And American beef with e coli killed a couple of American children a few years ago, what's your point?
And you I am surmising you would have castigated people 100 years ago sending money back to Dublin or Warsaw?
That straw man's sure getting a good work-out these days.
Huh I guess you would have rioted in the streets a hundred years ago if Mrs. O'Brian or Mr. Vincenzo sent money back to Cork or Naples.
Mexico President to Mexico: MORE WERE GOING FOR MORE!!
And to set the record straight, I castigated nobody. I merely stated a presented economic finding from a credible source. I mean we went to war with Iraq for oil right? Too bad immigration is costing us more than all Mexico's oil output.......
If you want to castigate, do it to Fox for refusing Americans the right to own real property in Mexico as he demands Mexicans have that right here, even if they are illegally here.
Go figure that too!
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