Thursday, January 26, 2017

Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- January 26, 2017



Alexia Fernandez Campbell, The Atlantic: Is NAFTA Over?

The presidents of Mexico and the United States are negotiating their new economic relationship in an oddly public way.

It only took a matter of days for the economic ties between the United States and Mexico to begin to unravel. Both presidents had been laying out their cards in the days leading up to their meeting, which was scheduled for Tuesday, when they were expected to start renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.

On Tuesday, Enrique Peña Nieto told the Mexican press that he was prepared for Mexico to leave NAFTA all together if he didn’t like Trump’s proposals. On Wednesday, Peña Nieto’s top ministers traveled to Washington, D.C., and met with Trump’s staff. That afternoon, Trump signed an executive order to start building a wall on the southern border, insisting that Mexico would pay. That night, Peña Nieto said he wouldn’t pay for the wall. On Thursday, everything seemed to fall apart over Twitter. Trump tweeted that Peña Nieto shouldn’t come to Washington if Mexico won’t pay for the wall. Minutes later, Peña Nieto sent out his own tweet, announcing that he was canceling his trip to Washington, then followed up with another tweet saying he was still willing to work with the United States “to reach an agreement that is favorable to both countries.” By the end of the day, Trump’s press secretary Sean Spicer said a border tax on Mexican imports would pay for the wall, though he later clarified to Peter Alexander of NBC News that this was not a specific proposal but an “example of options,” as Alexander phrased it, for how to fund the wall. (Mexico is America’s third-biggest goods trading partner.)

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Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- January 26, 2017

Trump and NAFTA: New deal won’t be easy -- Peter Grier and Simon Montlake, CSM

Trump's Economic Approach Starts to Take Shape -- Mohamed A. El-Erian, Bloomberg

How will Trump's foreign policy affect Mosul? -- Harriet Dedman, VICE News

In Iraq, America’s Allies — and Its Enemies – Are Nervously Waiting for Donald Trump’s First Move -- Sulome Anderson, NYM

Why Iraq Needs the Oil -- Jack Watling, The Atlantic

From Jack Ma to Kim Jong Un, Five Areas Where Trump Needs China -- Bloomberg

Trump's Hollowed-Out State Department -- David Graham, The Atlantic

How Donald Trump, Theresa May are the 2017 version of '80s power couple Reagan-Thatcher -- Kim Hjelmgaard and Jane Onyanga-Omara , USA TODAY

A Trump-Putin summit? Bring it on. -- Mark Galeotti, European Council on Foreign Relations

With wall, Trump begins reset of America's role since World War II -- Howard LaFranchi, CSM

Why Trump Won't Reopen the CIA's Black Sites -- Eli Lake, Bloomberg

Donald Trump lost in translation in Japan -- Jennifer Hewett, Financial Review

There’s no point to Australia’s push to ratify the TPP -- Elizabeth Thurbon, Financial Review

The art of war in Egypt: What exactly is it preparing for? -- Maged Mandour, The Daily Star

Boko Haram Suicide Squads Include Little Boys, Girls, and Now Babies -- Philip Obaji Jr., Daily Beast

The twilight of the liberal world order -- Robert Kagan, Brookings

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