Memo From Mexico, By
Allan Wall
Castaneda Out, Derbez In - Mexican Meddling Continues
What does the resignation of Mexican Foreign
Minister
Jorge Castañeda bode for the National Question?
What does his replacement as Chancellor of the
Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores (SRE) by
Luis Ernesto Derbez portend for future
immigration policy?
Does this changing of the guard mean more or less
Mexican meddling in U.S. immigration policy? Or is it
just the same game under new management?
Jorge Castañeda labored for two years for “the whole
enchilada” - a comprehensive migratory accord giving
Mexico effective veto power over U.S. immigration
policy.
Ironically - and this is what confuses a lot of
people - former Marxist Castañeda was seen in Mexico as
a sell-out to the gringos, and was actually the most
supportive of the U.S. in the immediate wake of the 9/11
bombing.
Contradictory? On the contrary, there was no
contradiction in Castañeda’s ingenious strategy. The
visionary foreign minister viewed a U.S. orientation in
Mexican foreign policy as a small price to pay for
Mexican control over U.S. immigration policy!
Why did Castañeda quit?
His combative approach ruffled feathers right and
left. He’d had conflict with just about everybody,
including fellow cabinet members and reportedly the
president’s wife (not a good career move anywhere) and
had even criticized Fox himself. But apparently, it was
Castañeda’s disappointment over
not having achieved the migratory accord that led
him to resign. On January 15th, 2003, at the
change of command ceremony at the SRE, Castañeda
lamented that “...it particularly disappoints me
not having taken advantage of the conceptual advances
in...migration with the U.S....that would so benefit our
two nations and all Mexicans...”
Don’t think for a moment that ex-chancellor Castañeda
is finished critiquing U.S. immigration policy. A member
of the celebrity elite academic/journalistic jet set,
Castañeda has been telling Americans to open their
border for years.
In a 1995 Atlantic Monthly article
he wrote that “Some Americans....dislike
immigration, but there is very little they can do about
it.”
A week ago, January 14th, 2003, his last
full day as Foreign Minister, Jorge was in New York City
speaking at a Bill Clinton-hosted globalization
conference, hobnobbing with George Soros and Slick
Willie himself. He
plans to give fall classes at New York University.
But, Castañeda is no longer Foreign Minister. He was
replaced by Luis Ernesto Derbez. Who is Derbez?
Like his comrades in Fox’s cabinet, Derbez hails from
Mexico’s
white elite. For the past two years, Derbez has
served as Secretary of the Economy, a position for which
his education and experience were quite suitable. His
résumé is rather impressive.
Derbez studied in the U.S.A., earning a Master’s at
the University of Oregon and a doctorate in economics at
Iowa State. Besides serving a 14 year stint at the World
Bank, Derbez has been a consultant for the InterAmerican
Development Bank.
He also has academic experience, having served as
both a professor and administrator at the successful
private Mexican university ITESM. (Full disclosure: I’ve
done a little teaching for the same institution!)
Derbez has been an administrator at the University of
the Americas at Cholula, Mexico, and a visiting
professor at Johns Hopkins’ School of International
Studies.
Another claim to fame: Derbez is the uncle of famous
Mexican TV comic Eugenio Derbez.
Uncle Derbez and
Nephew Derbez share a definite family resemblance.
What about immigration?
At the presentation ceremony of January 15th,
2003, when Derbez became Foreign Minister, the new
chancellor
commended successor Castañeda for influencing the
United States to accept “the migratory issue as a
matter of shared responsibility,” and promised to
work toward
"the objectives" established by President Fox.
The very next day (January 16th, 2003)
Derbez
explained that
“President Fox is the one who has dictated the
program and the vision of Mexico in terms of its
relation with the exterior, and President Fox is the one
who will continue dictating it...I see no substantive
difference between a Derbez chancellorship and the
Castañeda chancellorship...the chancellorship is the
chancellorship and the only thing that can be different
is the style of the chancellor.”
His first full day as chancellor (January 16th,
2003) was rather busy, and Derbez gave several
interviews. Comments gleaned from these interviews give
us some valuable perspectives on his immigration views.
Derbez
informed interviewer Jose Gutierrez that
“....the president of the Republic
[Fox], since the beginning of his administration,
has been worried about two fundamental things. One, the
respect for the rights of our fellow citizens that are
laboring, working in the United States...we have to
continue this policy of support for them, of support for
their rights, that they be valued and respected in the
United States. And secondly, that a solution be sought
to this process.... that leads to.... tranquility and
legality for all our fellow citizens.”
In an
interview with Joaquin Lopez-Doriga, Derbez
discussed immigration, revealing a more flexible
approach than that of Castañeda’s “whole enchilada”:
“The topic is still
important, a priority for the Mexican agenda... I have
been commissioned by the President with carrying it out,
but maybe, with a new way of arriving to a solution...
....I am convinced that what we have to do now is seek
other formulas, other ways, other realities ...if the
whole enchilada is not possible, then we can divide it
into small ‘enchiladitas’ ....and that for me is
the central issue now, that is to find what size the
enchiladitas can be to advance the process.”
Interviewed by Oscar Mario Beteta, Derbez said
that...
“It is very evident to us the
concern that we have as Mexicans, each and every one of
us as Mexicans, that they respect the rights of our
fellow citizens who are in the United States, so these
matters will continue in the agenda. You know that we
have....a petition before the International Court at The
Hague, for ....the rights of Mexicans who are confined
in American prisons under sentence of death. This will
follow its course and we will also have to discuss it...
all these matters that have been initiated will continue
and we will bring them to their end. What are the
possibilities of success or failure? Well, I am here
working for Mexico, with the president of the Republic
and under his instructions, and we will continue seeking
the formula for a successful solution.”
On the night of the 15th (the day he
became chancellor) Derbez was interviewed on Televisa’s
prime-time news show by anchorman
Joaquin Lopez-Doriga.
I once watched Lopez-Doriga conduct a real softball
interview with Fidel Castro. This time though, the
anchorman did a better job.
After Derbez’ affirmation of the priority of
migration to President Fox, Lopez-Doriga posed an interesting question:
Lopez-Doriga:
“...ex-[U.S.] ambassador Davidow...said that
Mexico’s foreign policy towards the U.S. was suicidal
because it put the migratory issue on a pedestal and it
was going to run into a wall. Do you believe that it’s
suicidal? Are you prepared to crash into a wall, do you
think it is suicidal?”
Derbez: “It is
suicidal if one who sees a wall throws himself forward
and crashes into it...It is intelligent for he who faces
a wall to do one of two things. He can turn around and
leave. Or he can climb a ladder and cross to the other
side. And that is the vision that we are going to
propel.”
Lopez-Doriga : “So
tell me, do you have a ladder?”
Derbez: I have
several in case one of them fails me.”
Derbez’ reply is positively ingenious. And it’s
really been the Mexican government’s strategy all along.
So Fox and company have failed to foist a “migratory
accord” on the U.S.A.? So what! They are actively
utilizing many other “ladders” to subvert U.S. law and
sovereignty and gain control of our immigration policy.
The matricula consular, for example, is now
accepted by hundreds of
police departments and municipal governments. For
all practical purposes, it legalizes illegal aliens in
the U.S. So do driver’s licenses for illegal aliens.
The
multiplicity of Mexican consulates are
quite adept in meddling in local American politics.
Well-established Mexican
journalists and
entertainers in the U.S. are doing their part.
The Catholic hierarchy
promotes open borders.
The Mexican government constantly agitates on behalf
of
condemned Mexican murderers.
International initiatives are utilized to advance the
agenda - for example, the International Migratory
Convention (a subject
Derbez discussed with Kofi Annan on his first visit
as chancellor to the UN).
There is a growing army of Mexican illegal aliens in
the U.S., many of whom are
not even very secretive about their legal status.
Why should they be? They’re hardly ever
deported!
Then there’s
The National Council for Mexican Communities Abroad.
And the increase in
dual citizenship.
“Fox Contigo,” a
weekly radio address by the Mexican president, is
beamed to the United States.
For all these “ladders” to be successful requires
plenty of American collaboration. And there is no lack:
Hispanic pressure groups and
blatant ethnic appeals to Hispanic voters, “multiculturalism,”
lax voter registration,
pandering politicians, the
bilingual education lobby,
agribusiness, the insane
“anchor baby” policy,
welfare for illegal aliens, the
mainstream media....
“Ladders” indeed.
Dr. Derbez is not to be underestimated, my friends.
Stay tuned for future developments...
American citizen Allan
Wall lives in Mexico, but spends a total of about six
weeks a year in the state of Texas, where he drills with
the Texas Army National Guard.
VDARE.COM articles are archived
here; his
FRONTPAGEMAG.COM articles are archived
here. Readers can contact Allan Wall at
allan39@prodigy.net.mx
January 22, 2003