Obama asked the presidents of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador to work jointly to fight this crisis.
Halfway between the desire to help and the limited political freedom to effect change, President Barack Obama warned that migrant children who don't qualify for staying will be returned to their home countries. However, he offered his "help" to the Central American countries from where the children come so as to fight this crisis jointly.
The double message came as a corollary of an unprecedented meeting with the presidents of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, in which the Democrat leader was able to counter the initial objections and reach a lukewarm level of support and a "commitment" to work jointly to stop the trafficking of minors.
"We expressed our commitment to work together in a spirit of shared responsibility to address the underlying causes of migration," he said after over two hours of deliberation. However, the idea of working toward "reducing criminal activity and promoting greater social and economic opportunity," as factors that contribute to children's desperate migration to the U.S., was too ambiguous for many.
It wasn't a ceremonious diplomatic encounter or a good moment for Obama, who received all three heads of state, while at the same time pressuring Congress to approve the $370 million aid package that he asked for to solve the crisis.
That project is still at a standstill, due to Republican resistance, and it is at risk of not being resolved before the Capitol goes into summer recess next week.
The White House's objective is to stop the trafficking of unaccompanied minor coming from those countries as soon as possible. Them not being deported immediately caused a collapse in the shelters; it also left the Obama administration in a jam and open to Republican criticism.
Along those lines, officials of the Democratic administration opened a window with a promise of a plan to accept as "refugees" those minors who, according to their home countries, qualify for such help.
It's not a very broad window. "It's a pilot program and, so far, reduced in scope", the officials said to the foreign correspondents, among them, La Nación.* In fact, the visiting presidents didn't seem to be very aware of the program’s reach before arriving at the Oval Office.
The face-to-face meeting with the three presidents was the result of many months of diplomatic effort. Mexican head of state, Enrique Peña Nieto, was also involved, however separately.
A President on the Defensive
The crisis of the migrant children became fuel for the Republicans to reproach Obama, which put him on the defensive.
*Editor's note: The original quotations, accurately translated, could not be verified.
Obama pide ayuda por el drama de los chicos solos
Reclamó a los presidentes de Honduras, Guatemala y El Salvador un trabajo conjunto para combatir la crisis
The message is unmistakable: there are no absolute guarantees and state sovereignty is conditional when it clashes with the interests of powerful states.