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Sat Aug 10 06:26:18 UTC 2013


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President Barack Obama is seeking to refocus economic relations between 
the U.S. and Mexico, even as fresh questions about security cooperation 
threaten to cast a shadow over the president's visit to the southern 
neighbor.Obama also will use his three-day trip, which begins Thursday and 
includes a stop in Costa Rica, to highlight the immigration overhaul moving 
through Capitol Hill, both for an audience in Latin America and for 
those back home in the U.S.The president is scheduled to arrive Thursday 
afternoon in Mexico City for meetings with President Enrique Pena Nieto 
and members of Mexico's business community.Since taking office in December, 
Pena Nieto has moved to end the widespread access it gave U.S. 
security agencies helping fight drug trafficking and organized crime. The 
changes mark a dramatic shift from the policies of Pena Nieto's predecessor, 
Felipe Calderon, who was lauded by the U.S. for boosting cooperation between 
the two countries as he led an aggressive attack on Mexico's drug 
cartels.The White House has tried to downplay a potential rift, with officials 
emphasizing Mexico has kept the U.S. informed about the changes. Obama on 
Tuesday said he would wait to hear directly from his Mexican counterpart 
before assessing the changes.Despite the intense focus on security issues, 
Obama advisers say the president will try to show that the ties 
between the two countries are broader than the drug wars that defined 
the relationshi
Undated: A Facebook graphic, by the group Credo Action, asking Facebook 
founder Mark Zuckerberg to stop supporting ads backing the Keystone XL Pipeline.CREDOFILE: 
April 4, 2013: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg during a company press event 
in Menlo Park, Calif.REUTERSFacebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is facing a 
backlash from the left over ads that support drilling in Alaska and 
the Canada-to-Texas Keystone pipeline, as the young billionaire wades ever-deeper 
into charged political debates.The daisy chain that connects Zuckerberg 
with the drilling ads starts with FWD.US, the bipartisan group Zuckerberg 
co-founded for the purpose of supporting immigration legislation. That organization 
gave money to a conservative group, Americans for a Conservative Direction, 
that aired a TV ad supporting South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham. 
It also gave to a group that put up an ad backing 
drilling in Alaska.Graham is among the eight senators who crafted the bipartisan 
immigration legislation now being debated on Capitol Hill. However, Graham 
appears in the ad criticizing President Obama for not approving the Keystone 
pipeline, which supporters say will help the United Sates achieve energy 
independence and critics say will be an environmental hazard.The president 
says Im for all of the above when it comes to energy, 
Graham says in the 60-second spot. Well, those are words coming out 
of his mouth. They dont come from his heart. No Keystone pipeli
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