Less than one week into his presidency, Donald Trump has taken the first steps in making his vision of a massive barrier between the U.S. and Mexico a reality, signing an executive order Wednesday afternoon calling for the “immediate” construction of a sprawling border wall to separate the two nations.
Though the move is likely to appeal to his core supporters north of the border, one place where Trump’s efforts are not playing well is Mexico, despite the president’s dubious assertion Wednesday afternoon that “our relationship with Mexico is going to get better.”
By Thursday morning, less than 24 hours after his order was signed, Trump’s dubious optimism suffered a public blow when Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto announced that he would not be attending a meeting in Washington, D.C., scheduled for next Tuesday.
Peña Nieto’s decision followed escalating tensions between his government and the newly empowered Trump administration that appear to have reached a critical point following Wednesday’s signing.
Throughout his campaign, Trump insisted the Mexican government could be forced into paying for the wall, which would likely cost billions of dollars. He has walked that back in recent weeks, asserting instead that Mexico would reimburse the U.S. for the project.
“We’ll be reimbursed at a later date from whatever transaction we make from Mexico,” Tump said in an interview with ABC News Wednesday. “I’m just telling you there will be a payment. It will be in a form, perhaps a complicated form.”
Peña Nieto has repeatedly denied Trump’s assertion. In a televised statement Wednesday night, the Mexican leader fired back at his counterpart in the White House. “I have said it over and over again: Mexico will not pay for any wall,” he said.
Responding to the Mexican president through his preferred medium of public communication, Trump tweeted Wednesday night that the meeting might be cancelled if Mexico refuses to pay for the wall. Peña Nieto beat Trump to the punch, however, saying in a tweet of his own the following morning that the Mexican government had informed the White House that he would not be attending the meeting.
“It is becoming a huge political issue,” Alejandro Hope, a national security expert and former intelligence analyst in Mexico City, told The Intercept.
As news of Trump’s executive orders began to break, “social media exploded” in Mexico, Hope said, with numerous prominent Mexican figures calling on President Peña Nieto to boycott his meeting with Trump.
Hope argued that even if a wall could be completed, it would do little to achieve its stated objectives, including stemming the flow of drugs north to the U.S. “Let me put it this way, all the heroin consumed in the U.S. in a year would fit into 2,000 pieces of luggage,” he said. “The notion that you stop that with a wall is truly nonsensical.”
The wall also sends a harsh diplomatic message that could have far-reaching impacts: It could push Mexico closer to governments the U.S. considers hostile or prompt Mexican agencies to withdraw from joint drug-war operations. Regardless of its intents, Hope argued, the very idea of the wall is imbued with aggression from the highest office of the U.S. government to the Mexican state.
“It is a hostile act,” he said.
A core feature of Trump’s ascendance to the White House, the wall was first among a collection of hardline, anti-immigrant policies the new administration had long promised and has now begun rolling out. The executive order calling for its construction also empowers state and local law enforcement “across the country to perform the functions of an immigration officer in the interior of the United States to the maximum extent permitted by law” and calls for a build-up of detention facilities along the southern border.
“We’re in the middle of a crisis on our southern border,” Trump told an audience this week at the Department of Homeland Security’s headquarters.
The Federation for American Immigration Reform, an organization that the Southern Poverty Law Center considers a hate group, cheered the president’s order as a step in the right direction, saying in a statement that the wall “will go a long way in making effective border control a reality.” (The federation’s longtime executive director, Julie Kirchner, was this week named chief of staff at U.S. Customs and Border Protection.)
Numerous civil liberties and human rights organizations, meanwhile, blasted Trump’s immigration directives as emblematic of a horrifying descent into discriminatory and racist policy territory.
“This wall would say that those from outside the United States, especially from Latin America, are to be feared and shunned — and that is just wrong,” Margaret Huang, executive director of Amnesty International USA, said in a statement. “We will fight this dangerous move with everything we’ve got.” Omar Jadwat, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, added, “President Trump’s fantasy of sealing the border with a wall is driven by racial and ethnic bias that disgraces America’s proud tradition of protecting vulnerable migrants.”
Border security experts have long pointed out that a wall alone would not solve the problems of immigration and crime that Trump so often describes. Indeed, Trump’s own director of DHS, the retired Gen. John Kelly, said as much in his Senate confirmation hearing.
“Wasting billions of taxpayer dollars on a border wall Mexico will never pay for, and punishing cities that do not want their local police forces forced to serve as President Trump’s deportation dragnet, does nothing to fix our immigration system or keep Americans safe,” said California Rep. Nancy Pelosi. The criticism was not limited to Democrats. Texas Republican Rep. Will Hurd, a former clandestine CIA officer whose district includes some 800 miles of border territory, said the wall would accomplish little. “The facts have not changed,” Hurd said in statement. “Building a wall is the most expensive and least effective way to secure the border.”
“The impact is more symbolic than anything,” Adam Isacson, a senior associate for defense oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America told The Intercept.
Isacson pointed out that Bush administration efforts at erecting some 700 miles of border fencing only managed to meet roughly half of their objective — the areas lacking fencing include remote terrain where such construction is difficult.
“He’s more interested in the display, the spectacle, the impact that it will make, rather than what will practically work,” Isacson said. “And yeah, it will play well in Kansas.”
Top photo: A woman carries her child after crossing from Mexico into the United States on Jan. 5, 2017, near Los Ebanos, Texas.
We can not war against the World as the neocons prescribe or absorb World over population as neo-liberals demand “open borders” and remain a Nation. Further either case will prevent restoring our lost Constitutional Republic.
We can have National defense and legal and generous immigration in moderation. Both neocons and neo-liberals hate compromise and moderate progressive action and both would do sedition to destroy the Constitution to achieve their goals. Fortunately they are both still need the center to move their agendas, for the moment the center holds. Less war move generous legal immigration. War only by congressional vote, generous green card and immigration policy, legally enforced.
Might as well fund a giant gold statue of Trump’s erection. It’d have the same practical impact.
so much lock down going on these days, you have to wonder if its a wall to keep Mexicans out or Americans in. What will this evolve into
I understand that Americans don’t like Mexicans, since Mexico is not a developed society, I’m Mexican and I would prefer immigrants from Sweden or Australia instead of Saudi Arabia or whatever, who would never understand liberal values nor give anything to society other than endless children. But I guess, if Mexico falls further into chaos, more people would try to leave, and there would be less money to buy American products, -which btw people here love!. Nevertheless, right now, thanks to NAFTA, inequality is rampant and obscene here.
Only the xenophobic ones who will likely never travel outside of their insulated existence in the states.
If you ever thought of buying Patrón tequila before the price went up again…
Executive order banning people from certain countries from entering America. A wall dividing us from Mexico. I wonder when the French will ask us to sent back the Statue of Liberty.
Can I also suggest that Mexico introduce a 12 month working visa for US Nationals working in Mexico, with a reapply policy where the US citizen has to apply for an extension only within the United States. This will force all US citizens out of Mexico on rotating basis at least annually. Further, revenue could be generated by increasing reapply fees to extortionate amounts. Say, $1000. This ensures it’s no longer economic for companies to hire US workers. Finally of course, a new law to ensure the extradition of any US citizen who breaks the law for whatever reason, with a no return policy back to Mexico for at least 10 Years. That covers it for the moment.
Any suggestion for illegal US Nationals working in Mexico ?
This author is an idiot! Get the facts and learn the truths then state them. Mexico is about to loose bigley!
I think the Divided States of America are about to loose bigly. Uuuuge!
I have spent all of my fun vacations going to the US, and now with the orange hater in chief, and all his flying monkeys spewing hate, I will not spend another dollar there. I hope you loose your renewable resource of tourism because of this moron you so willingly support.
While you’re busy fighting with strangers online, he’s working behind your back to take from you everything you care about.
Hola Mexico, you’re my new palm tree holiday destination.
I think you mea lose, not loose…….Uuuuge
So ironic
So what are the “facts” then? Put up or shut up.
I just hope that my country and politicians start making policies to end the so called “War on drugs” by legalizing it, now that the US doesn’t want to have anything with us, we may as well don’t want to play their meaningless wars and policies.
On CNN former president of Mexico V. Fox just called Trump at the republican retreat …..’Hitler in front of his nazi party’.
That comparison has been made for quite a while now.
There is some similarity between Trump and Hitler, when you consider the fervent nationalism both men employ(ed) to achieve their respective goals.
I’m afraid that this is just the beginning.
Only Persons who have no clue about Nazi Germany make that comparison. Furthermore it will not solve anything….
Enlighten me.
You can start by reading Mein Kampf. Compare it to’The art of the deal’ . No comparison possible.
Elighten me.
D’oh! “Enlighten”.
Woops…Peso just dropped 20%.
Kinda like the Weimar Republic?
Another analogy!
Exactly…don’t worry, be happy. Adios amigo.
Like S at the bottom of the comments section, “Eh?”
well…actually there indeed seem to be similarities. you should not make the mistake and compare the US with nazi germany of the late 30’s or early 40’s. but if you look to germany or europe at the end of the 1920’s and then the first two years of nazi germany and compare it with trumpism … there you are:
– the scapegoat of trump? muslims
– racist thinking prospers, well actually its not jews but muslims
– america first – we had the same thinking in germany too
– good campaigning and mass delusion? well hitler was doing that well too…
– simplified thinking about big problems
….and on and on.
so, yes, comparisons won’t solve anything, but for me its the beginning of facism – nobody with a bit of thinking can’t say in 4 years he/she never saw that coming…
But what about the peso? That’s gotta have something to do with the price of tea in China! ; )
This DOES play well in Kansas. The border wall isn’t about drugs, it’s about keeping Mexicans out of the United States. We’ve already got nearly 1,000 miles of border fences, so why the outcry about connecting those fences into a wall? It’s not racist to want to keep people out of your country who will drive down the wages that you are paid. It’s true that currently those are mostly crappy jobs, but they’re crappy jobs that used to pay good wages.
Let me guess, Sam Brownback supporter?
I do think that people have bought into a “ratchet principle” in regard to these jobs. Once they are filled by immigrants, it is inconceivable to pay real money for them, so Americans shouldn’t want to work them…
One option of course is that you can pay a bit more for your fruit, roofing job, car wash or whatever. I don’t think it should be as catastrophic as people make it out to be because so much of the cost of fruit is land and equipment and stuff other than wages, but I’ll admit I haven’t done an analysis.
The other option is that a country *can* pull resources out of nowhere by some strange cultural variations. I mean, it used to be say in the Soviet Union that college students would get dragooned to go off and ‘volunteer’ to harvest fields in the summer. Crazy, yet it did contribute to production. Of course, I don’t want to see that for the U.S. But is it really inconceivable that we could set up some summer fitness program, people come in for a couple of weeks, pick all the apples they can, sing songs around campfires, sleep in tents, get drunk off their asses on apple cider all night, go home with a couple of hundred bucks and consider themselves ahead of the game? I don’t know what some clever social engineers could work out.
But any theory of production that requires an underclass of people to do an undefined and expanding set of jobs doesn’t sound even that plausible.
Somebody new starts throwing their weight around soon – and Mexico remembers it dances a CIA tune, as if it ever really stopped.
With an approval rating currently little better than half that of President Trump – Mexican President Peña Nieto is an even less accepted leader of his people, and it’s whispered the next elections there could turn hard left in a Venezuela/Hugo Chavez way. At that point Mexico will be seen as a threat to the national security of capitalism, and empire will rationalize reasons to start invading the tropics of the Western Hemisphere.
Not looking forward to making all the necessary apologies to my Mexican friends and acquaintances during my next visit…
Just gives them some USD as their currency won’t be worth the paper its printed on.
The idea that enforcing our border is a “hostile act” is Orwellian nonsense. Not only will the Mexicans take it, they’ll be lucky if we don’t tax the remittances to their country to truly make them pay for it.
If only the rest of the world leaders had the cajones to ignore a bully until he behaves
*co..
Mexico needs the US more than the US needs Mexico. Lets see how long before he begs to come with his tail between his legs…
you sound like the giver of vicious childhoods
Don’t know him but you’ll see the answer to above question will be early next week.
Which?
Peso diving already….
The simple economic answer for Mexico is to impose a corresponding 20% tax on US imports and use that money to reduce corporation taxes in Mexico. That’ll balance the equation. A full and equal measure is my motto in life.
oh god, trump, go back to twitter
Oops, read that wrong
That doesn’t solve anything , it makes life harder for the Mexican importers. If you furthermore reduce corporation taxes, the mexican worker will get squeezed even more…. The problem for Mexico is that it exports products to the USA that can be made in USA. The only difference is the price so by increasing your import prices by another 20 % this will make your own exports less competitive…. Mexico cannot win a trade war with the US ! I predict Nieto will soon realise his mistake and come begging for a meet in Washington.
This could be an opportunity for China and Russia to trade with a hungry Mexican economy.
Eh?
Voice from Europe won’t be explaining itself, don’tcha know?
“Mexico needs the US more than the US needs Mexico. Lets see how long before he begs to come with his tail between his legs…”
The US needs the rest of the world more than the rest of the world needs the US.
Not so sure about that….look at trade as proportion of GDP. And the US can always count on its Nato allies and the spe ial relationship with the UK.