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Carlos Pascual Resigns: U.S. Ambassador To Mexico Out, Says Clinton

Carlos Pascual Resigns

ALEXANDRA OLSON   03/19/11 11:01 PM ET   AP

MEXICO CITY — The U.S. ambassador to Mexico resigned Saturday amid furor over a leaked diplomatic cable in which he complained about inefficiency and infighting among Mexican security forces in the campaign against drug cartels.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, in Paris to meet with U.S. allies on Libya, said Carlos Pascual's decision to step down was "based upon his personal desire to ensure the strong relationship between our two countries and to avert issues" raised by President Felipe Calderon.

Clinton didn't say specifically what she was referring to, but a furious Calderon has publicly criticized Pascual's cable, which was divulged by the WikiLeaks website.

Pascual's resignation – less than two weeks since President Barack Obama met with Calderon at the White House – appeared to be the biggest fallout yet from thousands of sensitive U.S. diplomatic cables from around the world released by WikiLeaks. It was the first such public departure by a U.S. ambassador during the Obama administration.

Clinton took the unusual step of announcing the departure of an individual member of the diplomatic corps, and while she was on the road meeting with U.S. allies to discuss the commencement of military attacks on Moammar Gadhafi's Libyan government.

She went to lengths to praise Pascual's work in Mexico and said the Obama administration never lost confidence in him. Clinton said Pascual's work with Mexico to build institutions capable of fighting drug traffickers "will serve both our nations for decades."

She added that she was "particularly grateful to Carlos for his efforts to sustain the morale and security of American personnel after tragic shootings in Mexico" that killed a U.S. employee and three other people tied to the consulate in the border city of Ciudad Juarez last year.

"It is with great reluctance that President Obama and I have acceded to Carlos's request" to step down, Clinton said in a statement.

The ambassador's resignation, however, laid bare how difficult relations between the U.S. Embassy and the Mexican government had become since the release of the cable in December.

Calderon has made no secret of his personal anger at Pascual.

"I do not have to tell the U.S. ambassador how many times I meet with my security Cabinet. It is none of his business. I will not accept or tolerate any type of intervention," Calderon said in an interview with the newspaper El Universal in late February. "But that man's ignorance translates into a distortion of what is happening in Mexico, and affects things and creates ill-feeling within our own team."

There was no immediate reaction from the Mexican government, although an official from Calderon's office said there would be a response shortly.

Pascual also may have ruffled feathers in the Mexican government and Calderon's National Action Party by dating the daughter of Francisco Rojas, the congressional leader of the former longtime ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party. Mexican officials and the U.S. Embassy have declined to comment on that matter.

One of the leaked diplomatic cable that most angered Calderon was dated Jan. 29, 2010, and referred to friction between Mexico's army and navy while detailing an operation that led to the death of drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva.

Pascual said the U.S., which had information locating Beltran Leyva, originally took it to the army, which refused to move quickly. Beltran Leyva was eventually brought down in a shootout with Mexican marines, which have since taken the lead in other operations against cartel capos.

Other U.S. Embassy cables released since have reported jealousies and a lack of coordination between various Mexican security forces.

Their release has marred a relationship that both the United States and Mexico have for years touted as being stronger than ever.

Washington supports Mexico's war against drug trafficking with more than $1 billion in equipment and training, and has frequently praised Calderon's government for bringing down an unprecedented number of top drug lords. Mexico, in turn, has extradited a record number of trafficking suspects to the U.S. for prosecution, a step Mexico was long reluctant to take.

But the Calderon government has become testy when U.S. officials express serious concern about the growing violence in Mexico, where more than 35,000 people have been killed in drug gang violence since Calderon launched a military offensive against cartels in 2006. Calderon publicly criticized Clinton last year when she suggested Mexico was starting to resemble Colombia two decades ago.

Pressure had increased on Pascual in recent weeks, but the State Department had vigorously defended him, praising him at a March 4 briefing for his "tremendous work on behalf of the U.S.-Mexican bilateral relationship."

"I know of no plans to adjust his status," the department spokesman at the time, P.J. Crowley, insisted. He added that Clinton was fully behind Pascual.

The State Department took the same stand as recently as Thursday. "We have full confidence in our ambassador," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said. He said Pascual was doing "stellar work" and no change was being contemplated.

Pascual, a Cuban-American who was the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine from 2000 to 2003, was appointed to the Mexican post in June 2009.

It was unclear when he would leave Mexico or when his replacement would be named. Clinton said she has asked Pascual to stay on for the time being to ensure "an orderly transition."

___

Associated Press writers Merrill Hartson and Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

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MEXICO CITY — The U.S. ambassador to Mexico resigned Saturday amid furor over a leaked diplomatic cable in which he complained about inefficiency and infighting among Mexican security forces in ...
MEXICO CITY — The U.S. ambassador to Mexico resigned Saturday amid furor over a leaked diplomatic cable in which he complained about inefficiency and infighting among Mexican security forces in ...
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09:41 AM on 03/21/2011
Dem' refried beans 'll get cha' everytime.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bradenton
08:55 AM on 03/21/2011
He resigned because Obama said he actually had to go to Mexico. Can't say I blame him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
05:32 AM on 03/21/2011
He was supposed to play along.  This is all a setup anyway.  No one ever will end the war on drugs and terror.  It brings money for the ruling class and their puppets.  They win!
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09:05 AM on 03/21/2011
It certainly appears to be win-win-win-lose -- business as usual. The millions of Americans who consume illegal drugs get what they want, the drug cartels make billions, which must be laundered through the world's banks at enormous profit to the banks, and law enforcement forever muscles taxpayers to fork over more billions to sustain their fairly lethal job of limiting competition and allocating market share.
Only taxpayers lose everything: their retirement funds, homes, health care as they struggle to pay for this -- yet another -- mega-billions tragic farce.
Do taxpayers think it's an accident that after a decade of U.S. occupation, Afghan still churns out tons of opium for conversion to heroin? And somehow -- must be a miracle -- billions in ultra-liquid cash just vanish right under the trillion-dollar nose of the American military and spookaucracy?
Look up 'custodial banks' on the net if you want a glimpse of the scale of Big-Money doin's.
Hey look, April 15th is just around the corner! Let's all be as careful about our 1040s as are those 50,000 reported American millionaires who effortlessly evade taxes annually by means of illegal UBS bank accounts. Must be just an oversight that the IRS and DOJ know all about it, but haven't gotten around to stopping this massive highly organized crime wave -- for twelve years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
11:38 AM on 03/21/2011
Great reply!  Thank you.  Let us all vote for a third party and do away with those two who switch leadership every so often only to lead the corporations and special interest. 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chivas
Illegitimi non carborondum
05:00 AM on 03/21/2011
The fact that the las two ambassadors considered Mexico their playground didn't help. Garza married the richest woman in Mexico. Pascual was dating the daughter of the PRI leader. Send married men there, no playboys, please
02:09 AM on 03/21/2011
I hate seeing gazillions of tax dollars being wasted every year to fight something that has been artificially created in the 1st place:

"With the advent of NAFTA, the drug gangs expanded into many legitimate businesses which could be used for smuggling. U.S. officials have reported on their purchase of airlines, trucking companies, new and used car dealerships, petroleum transport corporations and others. However, the increasing use of intermediaries as owners have made it almost impossible to trace their activities in detail. Operations of this size could not be carried out without at least the passive cooperation of key government agencies. In fact,corruption of the Mexican authorities by the drug cartels is notorious. A former Baja California Mayor showed how hopeless enforcement is by stating that he could pay police $ 300 per month while the drug cartels were offering $1,000 per week."
http://www.siliconv.com/trade/tradepapers/drugs.html

It was bad enough that the War on Drugs handed over an oligopoly to the Mexican cartels in the 1st place....but then the coup de gras was NAFTA (that provided the ultimate distribution/trafficking infrastructure for the cartels).

If you didn't know better, then you'd think all this was intentional and orchestrated....

I'd be willing to bet that Mr. Pascual has probably realized the same thing and has decided to move on to greener pastures as a result.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brant Kelsey
advocate of a peaceful coup de tat.......
02:48 AM on 03/21/2011
Nice post F&F Thought should be rewarded
NAFTA again amazing how it seems to be woven through the very fabric of the Woes we are currently experiencing. I suppose this was Clinton's sell out, or maybe He was really Naive enough to believe it was a benevolently inspired means of elevating the third world: I remember Noreiga, Iran Contra...I think the Bush's have perfected the art of profiting from Drugs. We haven't even begun to touch the ramifications of the Opium Fields of Afghanistan. I recall reading some time ago, that many of the Wealthiest individuals in the World, and this includes say the Federal Reserve, who secretly and Frequently have been responsible for orchestrating Foreign Policy.Money for Votes find Drug Investment to be quite a Wonderful business model, untold quantities of cash, Obscene Profits, and of course completely free of any auditing. The first part of your posts reflects the dynamism of the legitimacy of money tendered during our first prohibition..and how the Mobsters of that day took their profits and put it into legitimate business: Which of course entailed buying judges, cops, and whatever public official would acquiesce to the coercion of the green paper. With world Economies in the hands of so Few, With the absolutely unfathomable wealth and power: They are Secret, worry not about elections, and have mercenaries at every level, with any means, to facilitate there will. We dance attached to a morality: They are Wealthy and Amoral
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
05:22 AM on 03/21/2011
Repeal prohibition. problem solved
11:28 PM on 03/20/2011
Must U.S. officials now pledge to only tell the truth when it is in our best interest?

"It is curious that physical courage should be so common in the world and moral courage so rare.”

- Mark Twain
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GoldwaterKid
Vote Person, Not Party
10:57 PM on 03/20/2011
Mexico needs more attention, and hopefully, this will bring up that fact.

This Ambassador, like any, from other countries, has thought they could be open and honest in their discussions with their own country. That has been changed by now am sure.

These are not' freedom fighters', in Mexico, and the killing is real.

Most of my friends, who are second or third generation, will not visit their grandparents, for fear of the Country. Where once, visiting Mexico was a beautiful and wonderful experience, with so much history, now, you need body guards.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brant Kelsey
advocate of a peaceful coup de tat.......
11:10 PM on 03/20/2011
Apparently our diplomats communication with their government should again revert to carrier Pigeon: Likely Assange has not yet got the password for that. And I second your emotion with regard Mexico............I lived in Mexico for a short time, and as Well The San Diego area of California. I had the pleasure 5 years ago of driving through Mexico ultimately ending in Costa Rica. I won't say that the journey 5 years ago was completely event free. But I wouldn't attempt it today.........no way.
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GoldwaterKid
Vote Person, Not Party
11:21 PM on 03/20/2011
You were lucky to make that journey. Have been all over Mexico, and never felt worried, or concerned.

About, five years ago, my friends started not going to see their grandparents, and meeting them at the border for their visits in the U.S.

People who moved up for jobs 15 years ago, can't go back because they don't know how to live in that type of fear. Hopefully, both our governments will get their act together.
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11:19 AM on 03/21/2011
You need to place most of the blame on the traitor PFC Manning who is now in a military jail in VA, USA
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Lynda Filler
Telling it the way I see it.
10:56 PM on 03/20/2011
"But the Calderon government has become testy when U.S. officials express serious concern about the growing violence in Mexico, where more than 35,000 people have been killed in drug gang violence since Calderon launched a military offensive against cartels in 2006. Calderon publicly criticized Clinton last year when she suggested Mexico was starting to resemble Colombia two decades ago."
For a confrontation, endorsed and enforced by the US Govt, I agree that the USG has a lot of nerve blaming Mexico for the escalation of this fight.
It's your market place that is responsible for the demand, do something about it!
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hrpmap
Retired man still active..
11:45 PM on 03/20/2011
So if someone is pedding illegal pornography smut on the streets to my grandkids it's my fault? If somenone is peddling illegal drugs on the streets that will harm them it's my fault? Or is it the gangsters who are making the smut or the drugs the real culprit? You know the answer don't you?
01:47 AM on 03/21/2011
It is the fault of every American whether they do drugs or not. Simple supply and demand. The US demands they supply. Americans need to tell the congress and the courts that enuff is enuff. But good luck in that. There is such a huge addiction in the US it may never change. It has gone full circle. Heroin....cocaine.....crack...meth...back to cocaine again. And all of the above. And they want to legalize weed. Really??
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bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
05:24 AM on 03/21/2011
Supply creates demand. Government restrictions cause the bloodshed. Repeal the drug laws.
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zanderofnola
10:43 PM on 03/20/2011
The Mexican government is not to happy with the ATF right now and their Opereation Gunrunner epic fail.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
11:19 PM on 03/20/2011
And ~ Amnesty International is not too happy with Mexico with how it treats its illegal immigrants

http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/report/widespread-abuse-migrants-mexico-human-rights-crisis-2010-04-27
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
10:24 PM on 03/20/2011
Something no one seems to think about is the fact that our government is supposed to work for us. We are the employers and as such have a right to know what the heck is going on with our employees and why they are making the decisions they make, spend our money the way they do.

For too many years now the federal government in particular and state governments in some cases seem to think they are our bosses, our employers, our rulers and we do not deserve any respect or consideration. Yes, we get to vote, but then all is hidden, decisions made in backrooms, secret deals made. We see this in ALL administrations, some worse than others.

Maybe it is time the two major parties learn a lesson - "D" does not stand for Dictator and "R" does not stand for Royalty. You may say I am throwing my vote away, but I am going with write-in candidates for president and vice president in 2012 - Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
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11:27 AM on 03/21/2011
Check out Ron Paul for President.
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Telly Savalas
Make a little birdhouse in your soul.
09:51 PM on 03/20/2011
Let's all blame the messenger - Bradley Manning - for all the diplomatic porblems we have around the world.
If we did not know about these failures, we could call them unqualified successes.....
Clinton-Obama-et al have no responsibilities.......
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09:13 PM on 03/20/2011
What is this about him 'dating' someone closely connected with one major political party--Calderon's opponents?
How is this an example of diplomatic professionalism? Sounds like an awfully good reason to recall this guy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brant Kelsey
advocate of a peaceful coup de tat.......
09:08 PM on 03/20/2011
Imagine this: 20 years down the road, Somehow the US had managed the political capital, and the will, likely from some catastrophic terrorist attack that had occurred; to Construct a Barrier, a Wall the entire length of the Border: The costs of the Wall is Borne by Mexico, because the continual flight of citizens to the North, was gradually decimating his population. But because of the late realized imperative, they are now affixed with Gun Turrets, patrolled by Drones. Imagine if you will the Life of the Mexican Citizen remains much the same as today, likely worse. Imagine if you will, that still, they would run, they would rather face the risks of the run across "no Man's land" than to continue to endure in the violence and the Poverty. And at the 10 anniversary of the wall of Course there are thousands of Citizens Gathered: The US president arrives to demagogue the Issue. Surrounded by dignitaries and the World Press, with the Acting Skills of a Trained Actor......The President raises is hands to the Heavens..........and in the rich voice of a trained Thespian implores........MR. CAULDERONE TEAR DOWN THIS WALL.........Let's see if together we can come of one mind to acknowledge that the most significant foreign threat out Country faces is at our Southernmost Border. Acknowledging begin to discuss the imperative that it be addressed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lynda Filler
Telling it the way I see it.
10:59 PM on 03/20/2011
I beg to differ: the most significant threat the US faces in the war against drug is NOT Mexico but the use/abuse of drugs--the demand--which comes from the USA
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
05:27 AM on 03/21/2011
the threat is supply in a black market. there is a bigger demand for cigarettes and alcohol,
08:51 PM on 03/20/2011
Pascual's resignation makes President Obama look bad -- spineless, as a matter of fact. When he and Mexico's President Calderon met on March 3, the NY Times reported that Calderon was angry at Pascual, who'd sent a cable -- made public by WikiLeaks -- calling the Mexican army, in effect, a bunch of lazy bums for refusing to act on a US tip on the location of a key drug trafficker. So the US passed the tip on to the Mexican navy and Mexican marines killed the druglord. Calderon was all hot under the collar about Ambassador Pascual and complained to Obama about it. As the Times reported: "A senior State Department official
... said that Mr. Calderón called the cables unfair to his government and that he directed the blame at" the ambassador.

"And, the official said, the Mexican leader added that it would be difficult for him to trust the ambassador in the future.

"But the official... said Mr. Obama stood by his emissary, and left no room for Mexico to press for Mr. Pascual to be recalled.

“We told him Pascual is our ambassador,” the official said, “And that was that.”

That was that, eh. So less than a month later Ambassador Pascual resigns. And President Obama looks like a spineless fink.
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hrpmap
Retired man still active..
08:58 PM on 03/20/2011
The corruption in Mexico is recognized by their people, but is not often stated here in the US. A man from Mexico worked for me in the eighties (legal with proper papers checked out) whose wife, also from Mexico, was on vacation to her home town in Mexico, when she returned she was very upset. It seems that while she was there a national election was held and the election returns said that the area where she was visiting had voted 90% for Fox, but that everyone there was mad as he//, people everywhere were mad and she said that you couldn’t find anyone who said they voted for him. So apparently it’s not just Calderon, but the way things are done in Mexico. .   
09:10 PM on 03/20/2011
I have several Mexican friends who have said the same thing. One of my Mexican friends even went so far as to say that Mexico's corruption will not end soon because the Mexican people are largely corrupt. His words, not mine.
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Brant Kelsey
advocate of a peaceful coup de tat.......
09:14 PM on 03/20/2011
And thus: excepting for the demographic distinction of being a Christian/Catholic Nation, the existing conditions are more similar than dissimilar to IRAQ........but they are next door........Remember Saddam also had those same remarkable election results. So I ask you.........why no discussion at all. We talk about Sea Ports, and overseas threats, but not a word of the prescient risk to the South. The murders, the vanishings the corruption and the risk of terrorist easy inroads to the US through this environment to seemingly ripe to be a conduit for a Real disaster on this soil
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:12 PM on 03/20/2011
fanned - and now, on top of sending billions of our tax dollars, military equipment, training his army and police, we have to "avert" anything that might upset Calderon. But what can we expect when half our Congress and those in this administration in attendance gave Calderon a standing ovation after he criticized and condemned our country and its laws during a meeting of Congress.

I am getting pretty darned aggravated at all the blame being put on us - yes, we share the blame, but the Mexican government and its officials, its army and police are sure not doing much to secure their side of the border. Now our government is pulling the National Guard off our side of the border, which will put more of a strain on local law enforcement and the Border Patrol. Did Calderon complain about the National Guard?
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Brant Kelsey
advocate of a peaceful coup de tat.......
09:24 PM on 03/20/2011
And now I interject this: Is it possible, that this is just another trump card left to play in the false flag operations of the Oligarchs?.......Saved for the day when because of their recent overplayed hand in Wisconsin, that we need to suspend posse comitatus, institute martial law. And have our own troops boots on the ground in our own country, the result of and orchestrated terrorist attack, laid at the doorstep of Mexico. Our Kings, as those in Mexico will not go quietly into that good night either. We have had tactics since the founding of this country to engender fear, disrupt personal freedoms, unfetter extreme methods of government control......911 did a great job of taking our eye off the ball as the insidious influences of government have become virtually standardized. We don't even remember what is what like to be free of having "them" know what we are reading a the library, what we are buying, where we are flying, what we are carrying..........I just throw this out there to encourage discourse. I hold no voracity or belief, but it is brainstorming and think tanking, yeah, they do it also........only they do it in Secret. And they do it to protect their interests. And their interests are the complete control of you and me....on their way to a world Walmart......
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jonme
09:44 PM on 03/20/2011
don´t u think ...we should say to hell with sending money to these countries and spend money on our own poor working folks.???'
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Michael Ives
08:24 PM on 03/20/2011
End the drug war.