Alfredo Estrella/AFP/Getty Images

Walled Off

As the U.S. moves forward with plans to build a wall along its southern border, Mexico is pushing back

There’s an old saying that good fences make good neighbors. But is that the case when it comes to the United States and Mexico?

In January, President Donald Trump acted on a key campaign promise and issued an executive order calling for the “immediate construction” of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border (see map, below). Trump says the wall will stop people from entering the U.S. illegally—and his promise to make Mexico pay for it was cheered by his supporters during the election. 

After Trump posted a video on Twitter announcing the executive order, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto tweeted a video of his own. “Mexico will not pay for any wall,” he said. 

Trump fired back, tweeting that perhaps the two men should cancel their upcoming meeting at the White House. Peña Nieto agreed, pulling out of the sit-down. 

Jim Mcmahon/Mapman®

The testy back-and-forth came after months of tension between the U.S. and its southern neighbor. Trump has repeatedly characterized Mexico as a source of undocumented immigrants, drugs, and unfair trade practices that hurt the U.S. economy. He says he’ll deal with these issues by walling off the country, increasing deportations, and overhauling trade agreements. 

Trump’s proposals—and his harsh words—have angered many Mexicans. They see Trump as a bully and are pressuring Peña Nieto to stand up to him. 

Both the U.S. and Mexico have much to lose if their relationship turns hostile. The two countries are important economic partners, conducting more than $580 billion in trade every year. They cooperate on border security and other issues. Now those deep ties are threatened. 

“Severing the U.S.-Mexico relationship would be devastating to both the U.S. and Mexico, to both our economies because of the number of jobs that depend on that relationship,” says Christopher Wilson, a Mexico expert at the Wilson Center, an independent think tank in Washington, D.C. In the U.S., he adds, about 5 million jobs depend on trade with Mexico.

A Dramatic Transformation

Marco Ugarte/AP Images

Trump met with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto last August in Mexico City.

Mexico and the U.S. share a long, turbulent history (see timeline, below). In the past three decades, however, the relationship has improved greatly, and Mexico has dramatically transformed. 

Since the 1994 adoption of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)—which opened up trade among the U.S., Mexico, and Canada—Mexico’s exports have soared. In addition to growing much of the produce Americans eat, Mexico now makes and sells cars, electronics, and appliances. 

As the Mexican economy has grown, life has improved for many of its 128 million citizens. Almost half of Mexico’s households are now considered middle class. Kids, on average, stay in school twice as long as they did 25 years ago, says Shannon K. O’Neil of the Council on Foreign Relations. 

“Today, your average 15-year-old in Mexico is thinking about the quiz he’s going to take on Friday, not about migrating to the U.S. to look for work,” she says. 

Mexico’s economic gains mean that fewer of its people are heading to the U.S. illegally in search of jobs. The number of undocumented Mexicans in the U.S. dropped from a high of 6.9 million in 2007 to 5.8 million in 2014, according to the Pew Research Center. At the moment, experts say net migration is zero: As many Mexicans are heading back to Mexico as are heading illegally into the U.S.  

Despite positive changes, Mexico faces serious challenges in the form of poverty, violence, and the illegal drug trade. And Mexicans still represent about half of the 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S. 

Because of these issues, many Americans support Trump’s plans to seal off the border. They say undocumented immigrants are taking American jobs and resources, and they blame them for increasing crime rates. 

Trump has implied that many undocumented immigrants are criminals—calling them “bad hombres.” In February, the Trump administration announced plans to enforce immigration laws much more aggressively and to step up deportations. 

As far as paying for the wall, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan says Congress will fund the project, which could cost more than $21 billion and take until the end of 2020 to complete. But Trump has mentioned a tax on Mexican imports as one possible way to make Mexico foot that bill. 

“[Trump] has a promise he made to the American people, which is to secure our border,” Ryan said recently. “A wall is a big part of that.” 

But if the U.S. builds the wall, it may face new threats at the southern border. Mexico currently collaborates with the U.S. on counterterrorism efforts, sharing information on potential terrorism suspects. Jorge Castañeda, Mexico’s former foreign secretary, says that assistance could end if Trump carries out his plans. “Let’s see if his wall keeps the terrorists out,” Castañeda said. “Because we won’t.”

Patrick Chappatte/politicalcartoons.com

Outrage in Mexico

In Mexico’s view, the best way for the U.S. to combat illegal immigration is to support the Mexican economy. Its reasoning: Good opportunities at home mean Mexicans won’t need to go to the U.S. to find work. 

That’s one reason pulling the U.S. out of the NAFTA trade deal, as Trump has suggested, could backfire. He says NAFTA created unfair incentives for U.S. companies to move jobs to Mexico. His calls during the election to renegotiate or end NAFTA resonated with many working-class Americans who’ve seen factories close and jobs disappear. 

Yet many experts warn that the end of the deal could have devastating consequences for both countries. For instance, though NAFTA has cost U.S. manufacturing jobs, it’s also created new jobs in other sectors like agriculture. And both nations depend on the $1.2 billion in goods and services that cross the border every day. U.S. grocery stores may be hit with shortages and higher prices on bananas, avocados, and tomatoes grown in Mexico. And those U.S. farmers who send their produce to Mexico could lose a critical export market. 

In Mexico, Trump’s agenda has generated fear, anger—and a surge of national pride. “Mexicans are very proud of their country,” says O’Neil. “So there’s outrage that any country, but particularly the U.S., would . . . dismiss them and bully them.” 

Some Mexicans have pledged to boycott American products and stop vacationing in the U.S. And they may elect their own version of Trump in 2018. Andrés Manuel López Obrador—a tough-talking populist who promises to stand up to the U.S.—is a leading presidential contender. 

In the meantime, Peña Nieto and Trump are trying to sort out their differences. The two leaders spoke by phone after their Twitter feud. 

“We will work for a border that unites us, not one that divides us,” Peña Nieto said recently. “Mexico doesn’t believe in walls. Our country believes in bridges.”

Dividing a Tribe?

The wall would cut an Indian nation in two

Bruce Yuanyue Bi/Alamy Stock Photo

Tohono O’odham tribe members in Tucson, Arizona

For the Tohono O’odham Nation, President Trump’s plan to build a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border presents a particular problem. That’s because the Native American tribe’s lands, with 34,000 people, straddle 62 miles of that border on both the U.S. and Mexican sides. 

“If someone came into your house and built a wall in your living room, tell me, how would you feel about that?” asks Verlon M. Jose, the tribe’s vice chairman. “This is our home.”

Jim McMahon

After the Mexican-American War (1846-48) delineated the border, most of the tribe’s ancestral land was situated in present-day Arizona, where it still controls a territory about the size of Connecticut; a smaller piece lies in Mexico.

The tribe’s autonomy has presented challenges for the U.S. The Tohono O’odham (pronounced toh-HOH-noh AW-tham) reservation has looser border security than other parts of the border, which has made it a popular crossing point for unauthorized migrants and a busy drug-smuggling corridor.

Amid those concerns, the tribe agreed in 2006 to let the federal government replace an old barbed-wire fence with sturdier barriers designed to stop vehicles ferrying drugs from Mexico. 

While not a wall, the vehicle barriers created headaches. One rancher, Jacob Serapo, used to fetch water for his family and cattle from a well 100 yards from his home, but the barriers left the well on the other side, in Mexico. Now he drives four miles to the nearest water source on the U.S. side to avoid the barrier. 

“There is no O’odham word for wall,” Serapo says.

TIMELINE: U.S. & Mexico

 

1836: Texas Secession

The Mexican province of Texas secedes from Mexico after a short war. Nine years later, it joins the U.S.

Library of Congress

1846-48: Mexican-American War

The U.S. defeats Mexico in this conflict over territory. California, Arizona, New Mexico, and parts of Colorado and Nevada are ceded to the U.S.

1882-1919: Guest Workers

Labor shortages prompt U.S. railroads to recruit workers from Mexico. By the early 1900s, about 60 percent of the railroad labor force is Mexican.

AP Images

Mexican Bracero workers pick chilis on a California farm in 1964.

1942-64: Bracero Program

Initially in response to labor shortages during World War II, the Bracero Program allows Mexicans to fill U.S. farm jobs. 

1994: NAFTA

The North American Free Trade Agreement takes effect, eliminating trade barriers between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada.

2000s: Border Security

After the 9/11 attacks, border security becomes a major issue. Hundreds of miles of fencing is built along the U.S.-Mexico border.

2006-Present: Drug War

The Mexican government launches a war against Mexico’s drug cartels, which have made billions smuggling illicit drugs into the U.S.

Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images

A drug cartel member after his arrest in Mexico City, 2010

2017: The Wall

President Trump’s executive order calls for a border wall. Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto says Mexico won’t pay for it, as Trump has demanded.

David Maung/EPA/Redux

A mother and daughter hug at the U.S.-Mexico border in March

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