Mexico’s Calderón: “I Did It My Way”
Mexico’s Calderón: “I Did It My Way”
Felipe Calderón achieved what may have been his finest hour in an otherwise lackluster presidency, in the course of his just concluded trip to Washington. Conducting himself with great personal dignity in his address to a joint session of Congress, he managed to lay down a series of telling salvos targeted against U.S. culpability in an arms trade in which thousands of illicit weapons have been delivered to Mexico’s armed common street gangs, as well as to drug cartel militias, while an insufficient and rudderless effort has been the best that the Obama administration has been able to do when it came to cutting down the demand for drugs in the U.S.
While in
the U.S., President Calderón did not try to minimize
Mexico’s own shortcomings in its bilateral relations with
the U.S., acknowledging that his country could have done
more in terms of creating new jobs within its own country
and reducing the level of violence along the U.S.-Mexico
border. While recognizing Washington’s sovereign right to
control its border with Mexico, Calderón agonized over the
point that it is the Obama administration’s obligation to
regularize a legal flow of job-seeking immigrants into the
U.S., where they are needed, and that U.S. officials should
not daub job-seeking Mexicans as criminals, rather than as
honest but poor people seeking to improve their and their
families’ living standards.
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This analysis was prepared by COHA Director Larry Birns
ENDS