Towards the Summit
Towards the Summit
This afternoon the President landed in Mexico, where he met with President Felipe Calderon in anticipation of the Summit of the Americas. Even before leaving, this morning he reached out to all of the nations who will be in attendance with an op-ed published in English, Spanish or Portuguese
in the following papers: Trinidad Express (Trinidad & Tobago); St.
Petersburg Times (USA); Miami Herald (USA); El Nuevo Herald (USA); La
Nación (Argentina); O Globo (Brazil); El Mercurio (Chile); El Tiempo
(Colombia); La Nación (Costa Rica); El Comercio (Ecuador); El Universal
(México); El Comercio (Perú); El Nuevo Día (Puerto Rico); El País
(Uruguay); and El Nacional (Venezuela).
The President laid out his vision for the Summit in the op-ed:
As we approach the Summit of
the Americas, our hemisphere is faced with a clear choice. We can
overcome our shared challenges with a sense of common purpose, or we
can stay mired in the old debates of the past. For the sake of all our
people, we must choose the future.
Too often, the United States
has not pursued and sustained engagement with our neighbors. We have
been too easily distracted by other priorities, and have failed to see
that our own progress is tied directly to progress throughout the
Americas. My Administration is committed to the promise of a new day.
We will renew and sustain a broader partnership between the United
States and the hemisphere on behalf of our common prosperity and our
common security.
But the President made clear that
this commitment would be more than rhetorical. He pointed to the
dramatic and long overdue shift in policy towards Cuba, and
forthrightly pointed out that there are many other issues that will be
difficult to grapple with: "The United States will strongly support
respect for the rule of law, better law enforcement, and stronger
judicial institutions. Security must be advanced through our commitment
to partner with those who are courageously battling drug cartels, gangs
and other criminal networks throughout the Americas. And our efforts
start at home. By reducing demand for drugs and curtailing the illegal
flow of weapons and bulk cash south across our border, we can advance
security in the United States and beyond."

(President Barack Obama bids farewell to the family of Mexican President Felipe Calderon following their
meeting in Mexico City, Thursday, April 16, 2009. White House Photo/Peter Souza)
Indeed, even at his welcoming
ceremony was joined by President Calderon when he immediately pledged
to work together in new ways to crack down on the drug cartels tied to
so much tragedy on both sides of the border: "At a time when the
Mexican government has so courageously taken on the drug cartels that
have plagued both sides of the borders, it is absolutely critical that
the United States joins as a full partner in dealing with this issue,
both through initiatives like the Merida Initiative, but also on our
side of the border, in dealing with the flow of guns and cash south."
The two countries also announced the
"US-Mexico Bilateral Framework on Clean Energy and Climate Change,"
which will focus on renewable energy, energy efficiency, adaptation,
market mechanisms, forestry and land use, green jobs, low carbon energy
technology development and capacity building. Specific areas of joint
cooperation under the Bilateral Framework may include:
· Collaborating on training/workshops
and information exchanges for government officials to explore possible
cooperation on greenhouse gas inventories, various greenhouse gas
reduction strategies, and market mechanisms;
· Through our collaboration in the
Border 2012 program, working with our respective border states to
provide opportunities for information exchange and joint work on
renewable energy, such as wind and solar, that could include technical
and economic project feasibility studies, project development, and
capacity building in the border region. Other border work could include
a bilateral border crossing planning group to develop strategies to
reduce emissions from idling vehicles, among other initiatives that may
be deemed appropriate;
· Expanding our extensive bilateral
collaboration on clean energy technologies to facilitate renewable
power generation including by addressing transmission and distribution
obstacles between our countries; fostering Energy Service Company
market development; and highlighting existing and proposed areas for
cooperation on clean energy and energy efficiency under the North
American Energy Working Group;
· Promoting academic and scientific exchanges on renewable energy;
· Pursuing projects on adapting to
climate change, including coastal or disaster risk reduction activities
as well as adaptation in key sectors; and
· Working jointly with other countries
to take advantage of growing Mexican expertise on greenhouse gas
inventories, adaptation and project planning. This work could also
possibly include a shared US/Mexican initiative to help developing
countries in the Americas create low carbon development strategies
plans for adaptation to climate change, and monitoring and accounting
for the results.
The Summit of the Americas will get underway tomorrow (don’t forget to check out Secretary Clinton’s digital town hall right beforehand at 11:15 AM Eastern) – but today was a good start to the trip.

(President Barack Obama and Mexico's President Felipe Calderon participate in a joint press conference
Thursday, April 16, 2009, following their meeting in Mexico City. White Ho





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