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Funes, who despite being elected with support from former Marxist guerillas has charted a moderate course in El Salvador, agrees with Obama that all countries in the region need to contribute to a solution. Some Central American leaders have expressed annoyance that Obama chose to meet with Funes instead of a broader group of Central American leaders. But Latin America policy experts said it was important for Obama to endorse Funes' pragmatic approach despite the leftist inclinations of his party. Funes said he would raise the issue of security with Obama in regional terms. "Security cannot be seen as exclusively an issue in El Salvador, or Guatemala or Nicaragua," he said recently. "Central American countries all suffer from the same problem." Obama conceded Monday that the United States also bears a burden when it comes to gun trafficking. "Every gun or gunrunner that we take off the streets is one less threat to the families and communities of the Americas," he said. But Obama, in calling for a new discussion on guns, recently declined to endorse the very gun control measures he had supported in the past.
[Associated
Press;
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