President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa met President Barack Obama at the
White House on 3 March. The fifth meeting between the two leaders was clearly
the most difficult yet. In the run-up to the meeting both sides had been
signalling what they wanted from the summit. Calderón made it increasingly
clear, culminating in a series of interviews with the Washington Post
just before he met Obama, that he wanted the US ambassador to Mexico, Carlos
Pascual, recalled. The US's two main ambitions from the summit were to have the
Mexican suspects accused of killing an Immigration & Customs Enforcement
(ICE) agent extradited to face trial in the US and to persuade Mexico to drop
its ban on US officials carrying weapons in Mexico. Although the US got more
than Mexico out of the summit, the only clear result was an announcement of
another attempt to resolve the longstanding dispute over Mexican trucks' access
to US highways. End of preview - This article contains approximately 1292 words.
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