Sunday 13 November 2016

Trump's Advisor: We can do without a wall on the border with Mexico

Foreign policy adviser of the future US President Donald Trump has called into question the embodiment of one of Trump's key and symbolic promises for wall on the border with Mexico and said that it is less expencive to build a fence.
"I do not think we need to break swords about the differences between a wall and a fence," - said on Friday James Woolsey, who headed the CIA in the presidency of Bill Clinton, the husband of the recent Trump rival in the election.
"It may even be cheaper. And then, even though the fence, but it's a good fence I do not see any problems", - Said Woolsey in an interview with the Wall Street Journal and CBS television.
The world and the markets were shocked by the unexpected victory of the candidate, whose campaign has been surrounded by scandals and insults and was based on promises not only to reduce taxes, but also to prosecute illegal immigrants, which in the United States consist mostly of Mexicans. The peso fell to a record low on news of Trump won, as investors worried about the implemention of Trump's protectionist promises, full with problems for the Mexican economy.
Billionaire castigated Mexican immigrants, and even during his trip to Mexico and meeting with its president, promised to build a wall on the 3,200-kilometer border and make Mexico to pay for the project itself.
But after a personal contact on Thursday with outgoing President Barack Obama in the White House, Trump changed his tone. He expressed willingness to maintain some of the provisions of health insurance reform, which earlier promised to abolish, and his advisers are sending reassuring signals to allies abroad, worried by the election rhetoric of the Republican candidate.



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