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e Syrians determine their own fate, so arming the opposition is
more palatable than direct U.S. intervention.The administration announced
last week that it believes Assad has used chemical weapons but said
the intelligence wasn't clear enough to be certain that the regime has
crossed President Barack Obama's announced "red line" of definite chemical
weapons use that he said would have "enormous consequences" for Assad's
government.Some senior leaders, including Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are skeptical about the wisdom of
providing arms to such a broad and complex mix of opposition groups.
But officials say there is a growing realization that, under increasing
pressure from Congress and other allied nations, the U.S. might soon have
to do more for the Free Syrian Army.The two-year civil war has
left an estimated 70,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands of refugees.High-level
meetings on the latest developments in the issue have been going on
all week, including one between Dempsey and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel,
who just returned from the Mideast.According to a U.S. official and a
U.N. diplomat, intelligence agencies are looking into allegations that chemical
weapons were used in Syria after the two March 19 attacks that
U.S., British, French and Qatari officials have referred to. They provided
no details on the new alleged attacks.This emerging shift within the administration
comes even as Assad a
p in recent years."Security has been so front-and-center
in the public discussion of the U.S.-Mexico relationship that lost in that
is the enormous commercial relationship between the two countries," said
Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security adviser.Obama is expected to
call for the U.S. and Mexico to deepen trade ties to promote
job creation on both sides of the border. However, he is not
expected to announce any major new economic initiatives.Mexico was the second-largest
export market for U.S. goods in 2011, according to the office of
the U.S. trade representative. U.S. trade with Mexico totaled $500 billion
in 2011.White House aides say they also see strengthening Mexico's economy
as a way to address one of the root causes of much
of the illegal immigration to the U.S.Rhodes said the U.S. expects Pena
Nieto and other regional leaders to be largely supportive of the immigration
overhaul being debated on Capitol Hill, which includes provisions to strengthen
security at the 2,000-mile long border with Mexico.However, Carl Meacham,
a former senior Latin America adviser on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
said the U.S. immigration effort is viewed with "skepticism and confusion"
in the region."They've been brought to the altar so many times by
different American administrations that there's a bit of a lack of trust,"
said Meacham, who now works at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.Getting Mexico's buy-in,
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