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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, 
wer, in 
order for them to share sensitive details with an attorney - Issa 
had sought specifics on this process from the administration last month.The 
letters offered some details on that process, though attorney Victoria Toensing 
questioned why it took so long for the departments to produce those 
letters in the first place."They're stonewalling," she told Fox News on 
Wednesday.Toensing, who is representing one of the State Department employees 
looking to come forward, earlier told Fox News that her client and 
others were threatened."I'm not talking generally, I'm talking specifically 
about Benghazi - that people have been threatened," Toensing said in an 
interview Monday. "And not just the State Department. People have been threatened 
at the CIA."Three Republican senators on Wednesday also renewed a request 
for the administration to provide the names of the Benghazi survivors to 
Congress in order for lawmakers to conduct interviews."This information 
will allow Congress to meet its oversight obligations and will help ensure 
our government is taking the proper steps to protect American lives abroad 
and prevent future terrorist attacks," they wrote.The letter to President 
Obama was signed by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz.; Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H.; and 
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
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