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- <text id=89TT2065>
- <title>
- Aug. 07, 1989: Interview:Jorge G. Castaneda
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Aug. 07, 1989 Diane Sawyer:Is She Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTERVIEW, Page 56
- Bordering On Friends
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Jorge G. Casteneda, Mexico's renowned author and academic,
- talks of the dangers and anxieties in a close yet often
- misunderstood relationship
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Dabrowski
- </p>
- <p> Q. The title of your new book is Limits to Friendship: The
- United States and Mexico. Just what are those limits?
- </p>
- <p> A. The limits are the resistance in each country to
- integration between the two. You have more people going from
- Mexico to the U.S., and you get a Simpson-Rodino (immigration)
- law. You have more drugs going to the U.S., and you get ditches.
- The limits are the fears and the objective interests in both
- countries against closer ties with each other. They exist on
- both sides.
- </p>
- <p> Q. The perception in Mexico is that the U.S. thinks about
- Mexico for short periods of time and then forgets it. But
- doesn't that work both ways?
- </p>
- <p> A. Mexico can never afford to forget that the U.S. exists.
- It can never stop thinking for a single moment that the U.S. is
- there, on the border, next door. This is an inevitable
- consequence of the tremendous asymmetry that exists between
- Mexico and the U.S. We have to think obsessively, constantly,
- recurrently about the U.S. The U.S. only thinks about us every
- now and then, and most of the time for the wrong reasons.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Is the U.S. sufficiently aware of the problems Mexico is
- facing?
- </p>
- <p> A. I think the U.S. continues to take Mexico for granted,
- although less so than before. The people with decision-making
- powers in the U.S. still do not understand the gravity of the
- problems Mexico is facing. I do not think there is a real
- appreciation in the U.S. yet for what the tremendous drop in
- the standard of living of the Mexican people really means, what
- the drop in government spending on education, on health, on
- infrastructure really means for the country and the people. I
- do not think the U.S. understands how close Mexico is to the
- brink.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Do Americans then have reason to view Mexico as a threat
- to their national security?
- </p>
- <p> A. It's conceivable that Mexico could be a threat to the
- U.S.--a Mexico in chaos, a Mexico where the basic institutions
- that have governed the country in the past 60 years begin to
- unravel, where you have a situation like the one you had in
- Venezuela last February (riots broke out in response to
- austerity measures). I don't think this is likely. But it's not
- something you can discard entirely. There is a limit to how much
- people can take. That limit is being approached now, too
- quickly. I know for a fact, and I think every Mexican knows,
- that an explosion in Mexico would make the Caracas riots look
- like child's play.
- </p>
- <p> Q. What is the likely outcome for President Carlos Salinas
- de Gortari's economic restructuring?
- </p>
- <p> A. The bottom line of the government's economic policies is
- that their benefits have not yet appeared but their costs are
- already with us. A lot is said about how public spending and
- the state's role in the economy have been reduced in Mexico.
- The problem is that most of the adjustment has come in cutbacks
- in spending on education, on health, on infrastructure. Mexico
- in 1982 was spending 5.5% of gross domestic product on
- education. Today it's spending less than 3%. In 1982 Mexico
- spent 2.5% of GDP on health; today it's spending less than 1.5%.
- In 1982 an elementary school teacher--in a country where half
- the population is under 15 and where there are 25 million
- children in school--made six times the minimum wage. Today he
- makes 1 1/2 times the minimum wage. In 1982 a top-level
- university professor made about $2,000 a month; today that same
- professor makes about $500 a month. That's part of the bottom
- line.
- </p>
- <p> Another part is the country's infrastructure. Ten years
- ago, Mexico had highways, phones, dams, an electrical grid, of
- perhaps the highest level in the so-called Third World. Today
- Mexico City's phones are possibly the worst in Latin America.
- The highways are falling apart, the electrical grid has not been
- maintained, oil installations are in poor shape, and oil
- production is now dropping.
- </p>
- <p> Between now and the year 2000, we have to create a million
- jobs a year just to accommodate the new entries into the labor
- market. For that to happen the economy has to grow at 4% or 5%
- a year. It's not happening. And those millions of people who do
- not find jobs are going to have one of two choices: being
- unemployed in the streets or going to the U.S. There is no other
- choice.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Is Salinas in control?
- </p>
- <p> A. He is in control. Through a series of spectacular coups,
- like the jailing of the oilworkers' leader and the owner of one
- of the most important brokerage houses in Mexico, he has
- clearly restored the image of strength and forcefulness of the
- Mexican presidency. But the main consideration for the working
- of the economy today is the foreign debt situation, and that's
- not in his hands.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Will this latest debt deal bring any relief?
- </p>
- <p> A. It is doubtful that the new debt agreement will bring
- either economic growth or an end to the danger of social
- conflict in Mexico. There is simply not enough money in it. If
- most of Mexico's creditor banks go the road of debt reduction,
- the resources that will be available will be very small. If most
- banks decide to provide new money, then there will be greater
- resources available but at the cost of piling new debt onto old
- debt. The new agreement is not a good one, but it is perhaps the
- best Mexico could have got. Under adverse circumstances, I think
- we'll have to come back to the negotiating table very soon.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Salinas has certainly been greeted favorably in the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> A. I think there are two reasons. The first is that
- traditionally Mexican Presidents have a honeymoon not only with
- Mexicans but also with U.S. public opinion. If one looks back
- at what the U.S. press said about President Miguel de la Madrid,
- or even about Lopez Portillo in the mid-'70s, one can see there
- was a true love affair going on, not terribly different from the
- one we are seeing today. This, of course, runs out of steam
- quickly. Frankly, I never believed Mexico would become a top
- priority for the U.S. This "We're going to pay a lot of
- attention to our neighbors to the south" is a lot of blah-blah.
- Every American President says it when he takes office and
- forgets it two weeks later.
- </p>
- <p> Second, Salinas clearly is doing the sort of things that
- are viewed in the U.S. as the ones that are best for Mexico's
- interests and best for U.S. interests in Mexico. The question
- is whether the policies he is following are more in consonance
- with Mexico's interests or with American interests in Mexico.
- I'm sure that if he has to make the choice, he will eventually
- come down on the side of Mexico's interests.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Does Salinas really intend to open the political system
- in Mexico?
- </p>
- <p> A. I think Carlos Salinas personally wanted political
- reform in Mexico. Certainly up until the elections of July 6
- last year, Salinas was profoundly convinced that he needed to
- open up the Mexican political system, clean up the electoral
- process and, in general, create a political opening in the
- country. Unfortunately, when faced with the choice of opening
- up the system and perhaps losing, or not opening it up and
- having the kind of electoral victory that would allow him to
- govern in the traditional fashion, he chose the second.
- </p>
- <p> This year the ruling party lost two elections, in Baja
- California and Michoacan. It couldn't afford to recognize both
- defeats, and Salinas is thus facing the same dilemma his
- predecessors faced and the same dilemma he faced last year in
- his own election. In a clean election the Institutional
- Revolutionary Party (P.R.I.) loses. The only way the P.R.I. can
- win is the old-fashioned way: by tampering. I think the
- prospects for something more than selective democracy in Mexico
- are dim as of now. We will continue to see what we've seen in
- the past seven months, the government and the P.R.I. tampering
- as much as they can and conceding only what they absolutely have
- to, nothing more. The problem with electoral fraud, even in its
- more modern version, is that it does enormous damage to the
- country and to its dignity. It becomes increasingly frustrating
- for Mexicans to face the fact that it is impossible to change
- other than through elections, but that through elections no
- change is really possible.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Does the rise of a stronger leftist opposition in
- Mexico, led by Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, pose any threat to the U.S.?
- </p>
- <p> A. I'm not sure I would agree with that adjective "leftist"
- attached to Cardenas or to what he represents in Mexico. I
- think "leftist" has a connotation in the U.S.: Communism, or
- anti-Americanism, which is not applicable to Cardenas. I would
- call Cardenas a left-of-center nationalist alternative to the
- present system. Does he represent a threat to the U.S.? I don't
- think so. I think most people in Mexico understand, as they have
- understood for years now, beginning with Cardenas' father
- (President Lazaro Cardenas) 50 years ago, that Mexico has to get
- along with the U.S. No government of Mexico can afford to fight
- endlessly, constantly, with the U.S. over every issue. Mexico
- cannot have an anti-American government.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Does Cardenas' movement have a future?
- </p>
- <p> A. It's clear that more democracy in Mexico does not mean
- a Mexico moving to the right but a Mexico moving to the left.
- There is a deep nationalism and a sense of social justice among
- Mexican people that Cardenas has identified with in a very
- mystical and mysterious way. He has become a symbol in a nation
- that has the most flagrant inequalities and injustices of any
- nation in Latin America, if not in the entire Third World. We
- are not the poorest country, but we are the most unequal.
- Cardenas has become a symbol of the desire for equality in
- Mexico, or less inequality, and a symbol of the defense of the
- nation in a country where this nationalism question has always
- been terribly important. If he runs, he will be a formidable
- candidate for the presidency in 1994: he will continue to have
- the quasi-religious attachment that he has with the Mexican
- people.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Why were Mexicans angry about the ditch that the U.S.
- has said it will build on the border near San Diego? Doesn't the
- U.S. have the right to protect its borders against illegal
- immigrants?
- </p>
- <p> A. Mexico's attitude toward the entire phenomenon of
- undocumented migration to the U.S. is very contradictory.
- Whatever the U.S. does is unacceptable and useless. Those are
- contradictory statements, but we have an ambivalent and
- contradictory attitude. There is an obvious element of
- humiliation in the fact that we are not able to provide jobs for
- our own people. The only way many Mexicans can find a decent job
- is to go to the U.S. On the other hand, it's a fact that we feel
- we have a certain right to do that, because nobody is forcing
- American employers to give Mexican workers a job, and a lot of
- Mexican immigrants do jobs that Americans would not do, at a
- lower wage and under conditions that Americans would not accept.
- </p>
- <p> The reaction toward the ditch is simply one more episode in
- this very contradictory and ambivalent attitude. Every
- reasonable Mexican knows that the U.S. can dig as many ditches
- as it wants and that it has the right to do so. On the other
- hand, there is an aggressive, arrogant touch to the idea of a
- ditch. A ditch has water; it has crocodiles, piranhas, or
- sharks. The idea of a ditch to stop emigration from Mexico is
- one that shakes Mexicans because it reminds us that so many of
- our people have to go, and it shows how vulnerable we are to a
- closing off of the border. But it ignores the fact that there
- is as much of a demand for Mexican labor in the U.S. as there
- is a supply of it in Mexico.
- </p>
- <p> There was an uproar in Mexico over the appointment of John
- Dimitri Negroponte as U.S. Ambassador. What is it that Mexicans
- don't like about him?
- </p>
- <p> A. They don't like his role in Central America, his
- proconsular, interventionist, pro-contra role as Ambassador in
- Honduras. They don't like his Viet Nam background and his
- national security, intelligence-community background.
- Nonetheless, it is possible that he'll become the first U.S.
- ambassador in many years to establish channels of communication
- with all sectors of the political spectrum, in which case he
- might even become a good ambassador.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Americans are often angered by what appears to be
- Mexican complacency in combatting the flow of illegal drugs
- across the border. How do Mexicans view the U.S. drug problem?
- </p>
- <p> A. The difference in perception stems from one very basic
- fact: Mexico does not have a drug-addiction problem. Some drugs
- have been consumed in Mexico for many years--marijuana has
- been smoked in Mexican army barracks for well over a century now--but there is no major drug problem here in terms of Mexican
- youth, in terms of addiction and consumption. There is a
- drug-production problem and a drug-trafficking problem, but
- addiction is not affecting broad sectors of Mexican society, as
- of today. So inevitably that leads everyone in Mexico to view
- the problem of drugs as less important, and less directly
- relevant to Mexico, than the way the U.S. perceives the problem.
- Whether this is fair or not fair, nice or not nice, is
- irrelevant. To a certain extent this perception is changing in
- certain parts of the country, not because there is a
- drug-addiction problem emerging but because there is a level of
- criminality associated with drug trafficking that is reaching
- alarming proportions.
- </p>
- <p> Q. What does Mexico want from the U.S.?
- </p>
- <p> A. There was a real hope on the part of the Salinas
- administration that the new White House team would very quickly
- have debt, drug and trade policies in place and that all the
- decisions regarding Mexico would be made rationally and
- coherently, that Mexico would have somebody to deal with in the
- U.S. who is both in charge and thoroughly knowledgeable on the
- subject. There is a tendency in Mexico to project its own
- centralized, omnipotent presidency onto the U.S. side, where
- things do not work that way.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Are Mexico-U.S. relations at a high or low point?
- </p>
- <p> A. A critical point. Never has the U.S. role in Mexico been
- so important to Mexico. Many of the solutions to Mexico's
- problems lie in Washington. This is particularly the case with
- regard to debt. The U.S. has had the luxury over the past 60
- years, as a superpower, of not having to worry about its
- borders, either north or south. In the case of Mexico that is
- no longer true--not because the Soviet Union is establishing
- a beachhead in Veracruz but because in order to maintain the
- type of relationship with Mexico that the U.S. has had over the
- past 60 years, the U.S. is going to have to do much more. The
- U.S. is going to have to pay a higher price in every sense of
- the word: more money, more attention, more time, more effort for
- the luxury of having a stable and friendly neighbor.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-