In his foreword to the book, Sidney Weintraub argues that the
negotiations leading to the creation of the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) may be the most important between the
United States and Mexico since the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe
Hildago. This book examines those negotiations from the vantage
point of one of the key Mexican officials, Hermann von Bertrab. As
an insider, but as someone on the other side of the discussions, he
provides a prospective rarely offered of contemporary American
foreign and economic policymaking.
Concentrating on the negotiations between the United States and
Mexico, with some analysis of the Canadian component, von Bertrab
characterizes the discussions as moving through four stages: an
initial fast track, the detailed examination of the proposals, a
stage of mobilization political support and working out side
agreements, and a ratification stage. All in all, a fascinating
report on a major diplomatic event and an opportunity to see
ourselves as we are seen by foreign officials. Of considerable
interest to scholars and researchers of contemporary American
foreign and economic policymaking and Latin American Studies.
General
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