
Mexico’s new president won’t alter its dangerously corrupt course in US relations
NY Post
Claudia Sheinbaum, the hand-picked successor of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, will be the next president of Mexico.
Unfortunately, that means US-Mexico relations remain on a dangerous course which has empowered drug cartels and brought skyrocketing overdoses and uncontrolled migration to the United States.
Sheinbaum owes her victory almost entirely to the highly popular Lopez Obrador government, leaving little chance that she will distance herself from the man universally known as AMLO.
Under the incumbent’s government, US-Mexico relations have seen a dangerous deterioration.
New threats have emerged on the border — ranging from fentanyl, weaponized mass migration and terrorist networks — and important opportunities for collaboration, such as nearshoring supply chains from China, have been largely squandered.
Worse still, deepening narco-corruption adds a powerful force working against a necessary change of course in Mexico.

Imagine if Allied intelligence had located Adolf Hitler in late May 1944 and killed him before the Normandy invasion. Imagine that in the same hour, strikes eliminated Hitler’s designated successor, the head of the German Armed Forces High Command, the chief operational planner of the war effort, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, responsible for defending Western Europe, and the rest of Germany’s field marshals and senior commanders.












