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MEXICO CITY — A landmark bilateral press conference announcing a major cross-border blow to organized crime was delayed by more than six hours yesterday, as diplomatic delegations from the United States and Mexico deadlocked in intense, high-stakes negotiations regarding the physical placement of their respective officials on the presentation stage.
The standoff, which required three separate drafts of a stage floor plan map, centered entirely on preventing any visual implication that either nation had compromised its national sovereignty, or, conversely, that either nation had done any actual work.
According to sources close to the negotiations, the gridlock began over the placement of the microphones. U.S. representatives initially insisted on using a single, centralized microphone podium, which would naturally position the American federal agent in the middle of the frame. Mexican diplomats immediately rejected this proposal, noting that an American standing 12 centimeters closer to the center of the room would violate Article 89 of the Mexican Constitution regarding foreign intervention. A counter-proposal to use two separate podiums separated by a small, neutral potted fern was briefly entertained before being abandoned over fears that the fern leaned slightly toward the north.
“We respect our American counterparts, but we cannot allow the visual narrative to suggest that Mexico is taking cues on podium placement from Washington,” said an unnamed official from Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE), who spent most of the afternoon measuring the distance between the backdrop logos with a digital laser level.
“Sovereignty is not negotiable, especially when there are cameras from Televisa present. If the U.S. agent gets to stand in front of the blue curtain, our general must have access to at least 60% of the mahogany paneling.”
The American delegation was equally unyielding. Sources indicate that representatives from the U.S. Department of Justice refused to proceed until they could guarantee that the American flag in the background displayed at least two more visible folds than the Mexican tricolor, thereby projecting a subtle air of logistical superiority. A brief crisis emerged at hour four when it was discovered that the shadow cast by a Mexican general’s cap partially obscured the badge of a DEA regional director, prompting a formal recess and an emergency intervention by a lighting technician.
A compromise was finally reached at 8:45 p.m. under a highly complex “Bi-National Proportional Geometry Accord.” The agreement dictated that the lead officials would step toward their respective microphones at the exact same microsecond, maintain identical posture angles, and deliver their remarks in a manner that allowed neither side to appear as the primary author of the operation.
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