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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> enge of illegal immigration is a growing,
prosperous Mexico that creates more jobs and opportunity right here," he
said.To that end, he called for improving an already growing trade relationship
between the two countries. Mexico is the second-largest export market for
U.S. goods and services and the U.S. buys more Mexican exports than
any other country.Still, the reality of Mexico's economic surge is perhaps
not as rosy as Obama portrayed it. While the Mexican economy has
grown, it has yet to trickle down to average workers.Obama spoke on
the second day of his Mexico City visit, before traveling to Costa
Rica. There, he planned to deliver a blunter message to Central American
leaders struggling with weak economies and drug violence.Obama was to meet
with Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla before joining leaders from
the Central American Integration system. The regional network also includes
the leaders of Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.The
U.S. view of the region is that its pervasive violence and security
weaknesses are holding back economic growth, and that with fewer Mexicans
crossing the border illegally, the rest of the region has become the
main source of illegal immigration into the United States.As a result, Obama
is expected to call for stepped up security cooperation, regional economic
integration and improvements in human rights and democratic reforms."We
want to make sure that our hemisphe
May 2, 2013: President Barack Obama, left, and Mexicos President Enrique
Pena Nieto, right, arrive for a news conference at the Palacio Nacional
in Mexico City.APMEXICO CITY President Barack Obama sought on Thursday
to tamp down a potential rift with Mexico over a dramatic shift
in the cross-border fight against drug trafficking and organized crime,
acceding that Mexicans had the right to determine how best to tackle
the violence that has plagued their country.Since taking office in December,
Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has moved to end the widespread access
that U.S. security agencies have had in Mexico to tackle the violence
that affects both sides of the border. It's a departure from the
strategy employed by his predecessor, Felipe Calderon, which was praised
by the U.S. but reviled by many Mexicans.Obama said the shifting security
relationship would not hurt cooperation between the neighboring nations."I
agreed to continue our close cooperation on security, even as the nature
of that cooperation will evolve," Obama said during a joint news conference
at Mexico's grand National Palace. "It is obviously up to the Mexican
people to determine their security structures and how it engages with the
other nations -- including the United States."Pena Nieto as well downplayed
the notion that the new, more centralized arrangement would damage its security
partnership with the United States. He said Obama agreed during their private
m
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