NewsJune 7, 2021

WASHINGTON -- Kamala Harris, on her first foreign trip as vice president, is looking to deepen diplomatic ties with Guatemala and Mexico, two Latin American nations key to the Biden administration's efforts to stem the spike in migration at the U.S. border...

By ALEXANDRA JAFFE and CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN ~ Associated Press
Vice President Kamala Harris, center, makes a double thumbs up sign toward members of the media Sunday after exiting Air Force Two after a technical issue required the plane to return to Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, after it had already begun flying to Guatemala City.
Vice President Kamala Harris, center, makes a double thumbs up sign toward members of the media Sunday after exiting Air Force Two after a technical issue required the plane to return to Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, after it had already begun flying to Guatemala City.Jacquelyn Martin ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Kamala Harris, on her first foreign trip as vice president, is looking to deepen diplomatic ties with Guatemala and Mexico, two Latin American nations key to the Biden administration's efforts to stem the spike in migration at the U.S. border.

Harris, who departed Washington on Sunday after a delay caused by a technical issue on Air Force Two, is seeking to secure commitments for greater cooperation on border security and economic investment, but corruption in the region -- a far more intractable challenge -- will complicate her efforts.

It's already had a significant impact on her work in the region. Harris has not engaged substantively with the leaders of Honduras and El Salvador, who are both embroiled in corruption scandals. And it's an issue experts in the region say will need to be addressed to make any lasting changes.

"Corruption is a cancer in the region," said Jason Marczak, director of the Atlantic Council's Adrienne Arsht Latin America Center. "Addressing corruption is fundamental to creating hope and creating the potential for opportunity."

Marczak noted corruption in the region affects human rights protections, employment opportunities, the cost of goods and much more. Jobs, he said, will come "with investment, and investment comes where there is certainty in the rule of law." Without that, efforts to improve living conditions can only go so far.

In the months since she was tasked by President Joe Biden with addressing the root causes of migration to the U.S.-Mexico border, Harris has laid out an approach centered on creating better opportunities and living conditions in the region through humanitarian and economic aid.

Harris announced plans to send $310 million to provide support for refugees and address food shortages, and recently secured commitments from a dozen companies and organizations to invest in the Northern Triangle countries to promote economic opportunity and job training.

Washington won some goodwill through its vaccine diplomacy this past week. Guatemala's president, Alejandro Giammattei, and Mexico's Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador received calls from Harris on Thursday telling them the U.S. would be sending 500,000 doses and 1 million doses, respectively, of COVID-19 vaccine.

About 30 minutes into Harris' flight to Guatemala City on Sunday afternoon, a technical issue forced Air Force Two to return to Joint Base Andrews. She departed on another plane about an hour and a half later.

While in Guatemala, Harris plans to meet community leaders, innovators and entrepreneurs. In Mexico, Harris will participate in a conversation with female entrepreneurs and hold a roundtable with labor workers. That's in addition to bilateral meetings with the leaders of both countries.

Harris said during a May meeting with Guatemalan justice leaders corruption is a "significant deterrent" to economic investment there.

She's underscored the need to address corruption in public remarks and events. In her meeting with several leading voices on Guatemala's justice system, she noted her work as a prosecutor and said "injustice is a root cause of migration."

"Part of giving people hope is having a very specific commitment to rooting out corruption in the region," she said.

Harris has also raised the issue during virtual meetings with the leaders of both countries and aides say she will do it again during meetings on her trip.

"There are acute factors -- natural disasters, food insecurity, the climate crisis, and then there are root causes -- poverty, violence, corruption," said Harris' chief spokeswoman, Symone Sanders. "From the vice president's perspective, this is about helping build hope in the region, and that a better life is in fact possible at home."

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While in Latin America, Harris will also have to navigate the politics of immigration. Congressional Republicans have criticized Biden and Harris for deciding not to visit the border, and contend the administration is ignoring what they say is a crisis there. April was the second-busiest month on record for unaccompanied children encountered at the U.S.-Mexico border, following March's all-time high. The Border Patrol's total encounters in April were up 3% from March, marking the highest level since April 2000.

In her efforts to win commitments on corruption from the region's leaders, Harris can point to several moves by the Biden administration this past week.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized the problem during his own recent trip to Central America. The White House issued a memo elevating foreign corruption to a major national security issue, and directed all federal agencies to prioritize it and modernize their foreign corruption-fighting tools.

Eric Olson, director of policy at the Seattle International Foundation, which works to promote good governance in Central America, said addressing corruption will take particular diplomatic skill. Harris will need to hold the leaders of Guatemala and Mexico accountable while also deepening trust and cooperation with the two nations.

"The challenge that she faces is how to, on the one hand, have a conversation, keep the door open -- while not seeming to ignore the obvious elephant in the room, which is this incredible penetration of the state by corrupt actors," he said.

In Mexico, Lopez Obrador continues to face a complicated security situation in many parts of the country. Nearly three-dozen candidates or pre-candidates were killed before this weekend's midterm elections as drug cartels sought to protect their interests. The government's inability to provide security in parts of the country is of interest to the U.S. in an immigration context, both for the people who are displaced by violence and the impact it has on a severely weakened economy trying to reemerge from the pandemic.

The number of Mexicans encountered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection rose steadily from December through April. Mexico remains a key U.S. ally in trying to slow immigration, not only of its own citizens, but those crossing its territory. Successive U.S. administrations have effectively tried to push their immigration enforcement goals south to Mexico and Guatemala.

Nongovernmental organizations placed Guatemala's widespread corruption at the top of their list of concerns before Harris' visit. Last month, two lawyers who are outspoken critics of Giammattei's administration were arrested on what they say were trumped-up charges aimed at silencing them.

The selection of judges for Guatemala's Constitutional Court, its highest, was mired in influence peddling and alleged corruption. Giammattei picked his chief of staff to fill one of the five vacancies. When Gloria Porras, a respected force against corruption, was elected to a second term, the congress controlled by Giammattei's party refused to seat her.

Harris' visit comes with high expectations, but organizations concerned about the rule of law and corruption in Guatemala have doubts about what the U.S. can do to halt the deterioration or co-optation of government institutions.

Tiziano Breda, a Central America analyst with Crisis Group, said the challenge for Harris "is to not play the Guatemalan government's game, where on one side it expresses willingness to collaborate with the United States while on the other it takes steps weakening the rule of law, accountability and the fight against corruption."

Breda said the risk of any public show of support to the government could embolden it.

While experts say they are watching for potential announcements on further food or economic aid coming out of the trip, clear progress on corruption may be more elusive, and any efforts will take much longer to bear fruit.

"These are societies built on corruption," Olson said. "You're not gonna have an impact in six months."

Sherman reported from Mexico City. Associated Press writer Sonia Perez D. in Guatemala City contributed to this report.

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