Pubdate: Thu, 19 Apr 2001 Source: Corpus Christi Caller-Times (TX) Copyright: 2001 Corpus Christi Caller-Times Contact: http://www.caller.com/commcentral/email_ed.htm Website: http://www.caller.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/872 HELMS GOES TO MEXICO AND FINDS AMIGOS Mexico's sharpest critic, Sen. Jesse Helms, goes south of the border in a first for himself and the nation. In Mexico, Jesse Helms might have been regarded as the best example of the ugly American. That is, until this week. The Republican senator from North Carolina has been Mexico's severest critic, a staunch opponent of NAFTA and the fiercest advocate of the argument that the nation's southern neighbor ought to be "decertified" because of its corruption and uncooperativeness in the fight against illegal drugs. Helms' critical assessment of Mexico's government and its policies hardly comes from a close, in-the-field study. He rarely travels outside the United States. The 79-year-old senator is never among the raft of members of Congress who find it somehow necessary to travel the globe to personally inspect the workings of foreign aid and meet foreign dignitaries. He calls such trips a waste of money. Yet he has been sure enough of his judgment that he called the continuing certification of Mexico a "fraud" and his personal opposition to a American ambassador to Mexico disrupted cross-border relations for months, to the exasperation of both sides. Not that the consternation bothered Helms. And the feeling was mutual: a Mexico City newspaper described Helms as "a known historic enemy of Mexico." Yet this week, there was Helms in Mexico City, shaking hands and rubbing elbows with Mexican dignitaries of all descriptions, starting with President Vicente Fox. No pictures yet of Helms donning a sombrero, but such is the historic turn of events that that wouldn't be surprising. Helms was in the Mexican capital for the first joint meeting of a Senate committee held outside the United States. Helms' trip to Mexico - he was accompanied by fellow senators Joseph Biden of Delaware, Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island and John Ensign of Nevada - was his own idea. His new friendlier stance toward Mexico was brought about by the victory of Fox, the moderate conservative who routed the party that had ruled Mexico for 71 years, the PRI. Helms seems amenable to more pragmatic, if not warmer, talks on mutual problems with Mexico: immigration and narcotics trafficking. That Helms can focus more on pragmatic matters and less on unreasonable obstinacy is due to a new attitude brought in with Fox's administration. Fox and his cabinet have been eager to show that they are less about using the United States as the bogeyman for all their troubles and more about getting down to finding answers to sticky problems. There are still many issues dividing Mexico and the U.S. Yet if Jesse Helms can be "simpatico" to Mexicans, then on U.S.-Mexico relations many things are possible. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth