Mexico begins deployment of 10,000 troops on US border

Mexico has deployed 10,000 troops to its border as part of an agreement with US President Donald Trump to delay a 25 per cent export tariff. The deal aims to curb illegal migration and fentanyl smuggling. Trump had announced tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico, sparking trade war fears. Mexico and Canada negotiated a temporary reprieve. President Claudia Sheinbaum assured that the deployment does not compromise national security.
Mexico begins deployment of 10,000 troops on US border
Representative image (Image credits: AP)
MEXICO CITY: Mexico began Tuesday the 10,000-strong border troop deployment it had promised US President Donald Trump in exchange for delaying a 25-per cent tariff on exported goods, President Claudia Sheinbaum said.
"The deployment has already started," she told reporters a day after announcing a last-minute deal with Trump to tighten measures against illegal migration and cross-border smuggling of the drug fentanyl.
Trump on Saturday announced sweeping measures against the United States's three biggest trading partners: Canada, China and Mexico.
Its immediate neighbors were to pay an export tariff of 25 per cent, the president announced, and China an additional 10 per cent on top of existing duties.
Canada and Mexico announced reciprocal levies before both countries' presidents managed to strike a deal with Trump Monday that saw him delay the tariffs by a month.
Markets had slumped Monday after the weekend threats sparked fears of a global trade war.
Sheinbaum said Tuesday troops had been taken from parts of the country that "do not have as much of a security problem."
More than 450,000 people have been murdered countrywide since Mexico launched a major offensive against drug cartels in 2006.
The US border deployment "does not leave the rest of the country without security," the president insisted.
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