August 10, 2009 8:16 AM

Obama, Calderon Meet at Mexico Summit

By
CBSNews
(CBS/ AP)  President Barack Obama pressed for a new tone in the United States' relationship with Mexico but found no immediate progress Sunday on the divisions between him and Mexican President Felipe Calderon over of the pace of U.S. drug-fighting aid and a ban on Mexican trucks north of the border.

Mr. Obama kicked off his second trip to Mexico as president with a friendly 45-minute meeting with Calderon that touched on the vast trade relationship between their two countries, their cooperation on swine flu and the violent Mexican gangs dominating the drug trade on both sides of the border. Their talks came before the start of a lightning-quick three-way summit between the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Often called the "Three Amigos" summit, the meeting of Mr. Obama, Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper began over dinner at a cultural institution in this town near the mountains. The summit's formal talks, the fifth for the three countries, were taking place Monday, followed by a meeting-capping joint appearance before reporters at midday.

During the separate sit-down between Mr. Obama and Calderon, the Mexican leader raised his concerns about the speed of implementation of the United States' three-year, $1.4 billion drug-fighting package known as the Merida Initiative. One $100 million installment is being delayed over rising concerns among some in Congress about the Mexican army's abuses.

The U.S. law requires Congress to withhold some funding unless the State Department reports Mexico is not violating human rights in the process of its anti-cartel crackdown that started in 2006.

Mr. Obama told Calderon that human rights is a major priority for him, but also assured him that the State Department is working to prepare a report that recognizes all Mexico's efforts to prevent abuses, said a senior administration official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity in order to more freely describe private meetings.

Drug violence has killed more than 11,000 people since Mexico launched its crackdown. Mexican cities are living essentially under siege, and the killings are spilling over the border into the United States and as far as Canada.

Calderon also quizzed Mr. Obama on his earlier promise to restore a canceled pilot program that had allowed Mexican truckers to travel into the United States, the official said.

The North American Free Trade Agreement requires the United States to grant Mexican trucks full access to its highways by January 2000, and a 2007 pilot program allowed some trucks. Facing opposition from U.S. labor unions and consumer groups, Mr. Obama signed a spending bill that included a ban on spending for the program.

Mexico retaliated by imposing tariffs on dozens of U.S. products ranging from fruit and wine to washing machines.

Mr. Obama told Calderon that he would work "to try to move forward" but also said that Congress has "legitimate safety concerns" about Mexican trucks, the official said.

Outside the sprawling colonial-era building where they met in Mexico's second-largest city, caravans of heavily armed federal agents patrolled the streets. Dozens of police carrying riot gear manned roadblocks meant to keep protesters away.

U.S.-Mexico relations went on a rollercoaster ride during the tenure of former President George W. Bush, driven by a divide over the Iraq war, the United States' building of a border fence, and Bush's failure to secure immigration reform. While Mr. Obama has, like Bush, emphasized beefed-up border security, he has pledged to renew efforts to push through an immigration overhaul including a citizenship path for illegal immigrants.

And during his April visit, Mr. Obama made a welcome acknowledgment to Mexicans that Americans share the blame for violence south of border because of drug consumption and gun trafficking.

A major topic of discussion between Mr. Obama and Calderon - and for the three leaders on Monday - will be the now-global swine flu epidemic believed to have started in Mexico in April just before Mr. Obama's last trip, unbeknownst to the White House. An Obama administration aide returned home sick.

But what could have become a diplomatic downer turned into a bright spot.

Mr. Obama was never in danger, the aide and his family recovered, and the two nations cooperated extensively on the flu outbreak through the spring and beyond. The United States earned huge points with its southern neighbor for not joining the countries banning flights, halting trade and taking other actions that Mexico considered unfairly punitive.

Mr. Obama, Calderon and Harper will look for ways to build on that earlier partnership to handle an expected new wave of cases during North America's upcoming flu season. John Brennan, Mr. Obama's chief homeland security aide, said it is as important to further link up health officials and ready vaccine and antiviral supplies as it is for the three leaders to publicly reinforce a determination not to panic when cases arise.

"There are people who are going to be getting sick in the fall and die," Brennan said. "We want to make sure that we do everything possible to ensure the continuation of commerce, transportation and trade between the three countries."

America's first- and third-largest trade relationships are with Canada and Mexico. All three are partners in NAFTA, the largest free-trade zone in the world. Closing borders or restricting travel would be very costly for families and businesses on all sides of the borders, an important consideration given the limping economy and the fact that health experts see such actions as pointless in containing the flu's spread.

"There will be some pleasant dinners and handshakes in Guadalajara but Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has a major gripe with the U.S. 'Buy America' provision and Mexico's President Felipe Calderon has been playing hardball on the dispute regarding Mexican trucks crossing the U.S. border," said CBS News foreign affairs analyst Pamela Falk. "The recession has cast a shadow over the Western Hemisphere alliance."

WorldWatch: Tres Amigos or Tres Enemigos?

Bush kicked off the trilateral tradition in 2005 with the first summit held near his Texas ranch.

Peter DeShazo, a former State Department official for Western Hemisphere affairs, said Canada and Mexico are vital to the U.S. economy and security, making regular conversations at the highest levels a must. "These relationships are so complex and multifaceted," said DeShazo, who directs the Americas Program for the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The U.S. neighbors will want Obama to explain where America's economic recovery is going because both countries saw their own fortunes fall as a result of problems in the U.S. Obama will hear complaints from Calderon and Harper about "Buy American" requirements in the $787 billion economic stimulus package.

Climate change is a priority, too.

The three leaders also are expected to take a joint stand on a recent problem in their hemisphere - the June coup in Honduras that saw President Manuel Zelaya ousted by the military.

Mr. Obama has no separate session with Harper alone. The Canadian leader will see the president on Sept. 16 in Washington.

CBS/ AP
Add a Comment
by rightiswrong August 10, 2009 2:56 AM EDT
A N N E X C A N A D A, U S A ! ! !
Reply to this comment
by ffoulkes-2009 August 10, 2009 6:49 AM EDT
We would have to bust em up into smaller states...those provinces are tooooo big.
by brooke50 August 10, 2009 1:01 AM EDT
"While Mr. Obama has, like Bush, emphasized beefed-up border security, he has pledged to renew efforts to push through an immigration overhaul including a citizenship path for illegal immigrants."

Obama, don't even try this - you will trigger the next Civil War -

1) You have The Natural Born Americans, born here, this is OUR Country.
2) You have the Legally entering Immigrants who have asked (for various specific reasons and background check performed) and earned their American citizenship

You should be more concerned with making sure that every single American resource is used ONLY for the betterment of OUR citizens. Why do we still have homeless on the streets, why do we still have kids with no food? Worry about America.

We are still suffering for the "open door" for Somolians - The ones I meet on the street and in stores, are the most OBNOXIOUS, they plain reak from the STENCH coming from them, and have this attitude that WE should BOW to them and any demand they make? Look what happened at the Swift Plant! And yet, someone thought it was a good idea to supplement their living here, give them welfare, educate them - and worse still - gave them the fast track to get Citizenship!

March, 2009 -(FBI REPORT - OBAMA KNOWS ABOUT THIS)- "American counterterrorism officials' worst fears are personified by a young Somali-American named Shirwa Ahmed. He left Minneapolis about 18 months ago to join an Islamic militia in Somalia called al-Shabab. Then, last October, he drove a car full of explosives into a crowd in Somaliland, killing 27 people."

Now America is actually a TERRORIST COUNTRY! Why are we fighting our FELLOW TERRORISTS - WE ARE BROTHERS!

And now, Obama wants to "FIX" the Mexican illegal Immegrants problem by giving them Citizenship! ENOUGH!
Reply to this comment
by tincup356 August 10, 2009 6:19 AM EDT
Wake up America ...all these PROBLEMS we face.....are created by the same people who identify them. All for the purpose of creating the need for the government to jump in and fix.......only problem is,,,,,,it it usually just a lame attempt to rob the people of this country. All our problems are of the making of BOTH parties. for the last 50 years lobby dollar tainted legislation from BOTH parties has led to where we are.This last meeting of the big three is just to spend more money on the failed war on drugs. why do we waste money jailing non violent users of marijuana? legalization is long overdue......and the revenues that it would bring. having the economy do better for the people of this country is what we need....not more wars or waste of money ....and that seems to be all congress cares about....it sure isn't the citizens of this country ,,,,,,,the white collar ,suit and tie terrorists of BOTH parties care not about the people, only personal gain and greed.
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