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Mexico irked at CIA's `instability' assessment
From the Rantburg Diplomacy Desk...somebody hit a nerve:
CIA Director Porter Goss's brief, vague reference to potential instability in Mexico led to banner headlines in newspapers here and a harsh response from Mexico's government on Thursday. "The CIA analysis is wrong, it's erroneous and it's false," said Interior Secretary Santiago Creel, considered a potential contender in Mexico's presidential race next year.
"Lies, all lies! We're just fine. And at any rate, the bilge pumps will kick in any minute now."
"It's also reprehensible for an agency of a foreign government to be expressing opinions about Mexican affairs," Creel said in a news conference.
"Cos Mexico never has any opinions on the USA. No way, no how."
"I reject interference in affairs of an internal character ... in which the CIA has no reason to be making opinions," Creel added.
"So butt out! Manuel, how's that pump repair coming along?"
The tough words results from the briefest of mentions during Goss' testimony on Wednesday before the US Senate's Select Committee on Intelligence. It occurred in a section of his written report on "potential areas for instability" that referred to "potential flashpoints" in some of the eight Latin American nations with elections next year. "Campaigning for the 2006 presidential election in Mexico is likely to stall progress on fiscal, labor and energy reforms," Goss said.
Scusi? That's all he said? Good gravy. String up the US ambassador ahora!
The comments passed almost unnoticed in the US, but in Mexico City, the daily newspaper El Sol made it the top story of the day: "Mexico unstable, according to the CIA." A rival paper, Milenio, led with the headline: "The CIA predicts `alarming risks' for the campaigns." At his news conference, Creel -- President Vicente Fox's top Cabinet secretary, said, "We know that [the CIA] frequently is mistaken and causes erroneous decisions. What we are going to have here is not a conflict but a democratic electoral competition, as intense or more so as those in the United States," he said. Attorney General Rafael Macedo de la Concha told reporters he saw "no elements that could cause what [Goss] said, what he affirmed in that report."
"I've been meaning to get my eyeglass prescription filled, but it's been so busy. Hey, is that William Shatner over behind the press corps?
Mexican President Fox himself hurried past reporters who tried to ask him about the CIA official's statements during an appearance in the port city of Veracruz.
"Hasta la vista, baby."

Posted by: Seafarious 2005-02-19
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=56867