Mexico voices "worry and irritation" over US policies
The US government this week angered Mexico by saying it was seeking to deport many illegal immigrants to Mexico if they entered the United States from there.
Mexico on Thursday expressed "worry and irritation" about US policies to two of President Donald Trump's top envoys.
"There exists among Mexicans worry and irritation about what are perceived to be policies that could be harmful for the national interest and for Mexicans here and abroad," Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray told a news conference.
He was speaking after talks in the Mexican capital with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security chief John Kelly, who later met with President Enrique Pena Nieto.
The Mexican leader scrapped a summit meeting with Trump in January as tensions rose.
The US government this week angered Mexico by saying it was seeking to deport many illegal immigrants to Mexico if they entered the United States from there, regardless of their nationality.
It is the latest point of friction between neighbours that have also been at odds over Trump's vow to build a wall on the border and his attempts to browbeat Mexico into giving concessions on trade.
Both sides on Thursday pledged further dialogue on migration, trade and security issues.
Kelly and Tillerson were more measured in their words than either the Mexicans or Trump, who on Thursday said a military operation was being carried out to clear "bad dudes" such as gang members and drug lords from the United States.
But Kelly said there would be "no use of military force in immigration operations," and "no, repeat, no" mass deportations. White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump's comment was meant to describe the "flawless" manner that US immigration and border authorities worked.
TRT World's Tetiana Anderson is following the story from Reynosa, Mexico.
'A complex time'
Looking stern as he stood beside the US visitors, Videgaray said it is "a complex time" for U.S.-Mexican relations, which have gone downhill quickly since Trump's election last November.
Videgaray and Pena Nieto have been criticised at home for being too willing to engage with Trump, who has repeatedly cranked up tension with the country ahead of key meetings.
Opposition politicians and a handful of protesters demanded that Pena Nieto should snub the visitors, and even Economy Minister Idelfonso Guajardo had said the meeting with the president on Thursday might not happen, depending on the tone of the talks in the morning.
Mexico relies heavily on exports to its neighbour. But stakes are also high for the United States, not least because a breakdown in relations with Mexico could affect extensive cooperation on the fight against narcotics and on stemming the flow of Central American illegal immigrants that reach the US border.
The two countries need to strengthen intelligence sharing, as well as take more action to stem the flow of weapons and drug money from the United States and to shut down criminal organisations, Interior Minister Miguel Angel Osorio Chong said.
In a concession to Mexican concerns, both Kelly and Tillerson acknowledged the need to stop arms and drug proceeds moving south, and praised Mexico's extensive programmes to turn back Central American immigrants travelling north.
"There is no mistaking that the rule of law matters along both sides of our border," Tillerson said.
None of the officials made direct references to the deportation of immigrants from third countries to Mexico, or to paying for the border wall planned by Trump, a red-flag issue for Mexico.