Posted on 09/19/2019 1:48:16 PM PDT by ransomnote
Otay Mesa Border Wall Site San Diego, California
September 18, 2019 3:11 P.M. PDT
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, why dont you start, Kevin? And this has been a very exciting project, as you know. Its for many years, people have wanted the proper wall and we have a wall that the likes of which, very few places have ever seen.
And I want to thank all of the people. General Semonite from the Army Corps of Engineers were working very closely with them. I want to thank Kevin and all of your staff
ACTING SECRETARY MCALEENAN: Thank you, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: because what theyve done is beyond.
And I wanted to show you some of the details of the wall. You can see you can see a pretty good view. This is going to be close to 500 miles by the time we finish. Those are the areas that are most important.
After were completed 5- that should be done pretty close to next year. Over itll be over 400 miles. And we think we can get it close to 500 miles by the end of next year, depending on certain terrain conditions. But were doing all of the most important areas. We have a lot of natural barriers, like mountains and streams and rivers and some pretty vicious and violent rivers, actually. But its its an amazing project.
And I think what Id like you to do is if you could explain the interior of these pipes. The wall is 30 feet high. We also have 18-foot wall. We have a combination of 30 feet and 18 [feet], depending on the area, depending on the on the importance.
Tijuana is right over here. There are thousands of people over there that had been trying to get in. Tremendous cooperation from Mexico. And the President of Mexico has been fantastic. All of Mexico has been fantastic. As you know, right now they have 27,000 soldiers. So, in addition to the wall, we have the soldiers.
Now, the wall still, obviously, has a ways to go, but were building it at a breakneck speed. I wanted them to show you the interior of parts of the wall and whats inside of each individual slat. And youll see its a combination of steel, concrete, and as one of the folks just said it really is virtually impenetrable. Any walls that were put up would get knocked down very quickly, very easily. This wall is not something that can be really knocked down. I guess anything can, but this is very tough.
And it goes down six feet. Its three and four feet wide. The concrete you see it right here; its exposed. And I might ask General Semonite to say a few words about it.
And Id like to bring them right up look at the inner tube to see what happens. Because after the wall is up, we pour concrete, and concrete goes into the tube. And in addition to that, we have rebar. So if you think youre going to cut it with a blowtorch, that doesnt work because you hit concrete. And then if you think youre going to go through the concrete, that doesnt work because we have very powerful rebar inside.
So its a very powerful, very powerful wall the likes of which, probably, to this extent, has not been built before.
This is an area because its so highly trafficked, this was one of the most dangerous areas. We have a double wall. We have a wall on both sides. One is 18 feet; thats your border. And the other one is 30 feet. And everybody if they should be able to make that, this is where people are waiting for them. Its a very a very powerful situation.
So, General, maybe you could take over for a couple of minutes, and then Ill take it back.
GENERAL SEMONITE: So, Mr. President, I want to build on your comments. This is a system. It is both the two walls, but it also is the road networks, down through the middle and the back, so that the Customs and Border can go ahead and continue to be able to move around it. Also, a lighting system.
And if you think about this, I mean, it really is kind of a defense in depth. When you think about these panels going up right now, were putting in about 270 panels a day that are going in the ground. Weve got over 44,000 panels that are already built. And you think about the depth of how were doing it.
Without getting into a lot of details: 66 miles today are already completed. Theres 251 miles that are under contract, going in the ground right now at 17 other sites. Theres 163 miles that are actually on contracts that are going to be (inaudible) in the next 90 days. And the remainder of the miles the President talked about is mainly private land that takes a little bit longer to get.
One of the things I want to just remind you about: That when you have a football field kind of a flat area like this its a little bit easier to build a wall. But if you just turn around and look at the mountain behind you, one of the projects thats going to go up in the next year continues this barrier right up over the rest of that mountain. So it goes back to being able to weve got to have this linear capability to be able to continue to provide that level of defense.
We will talk this is what the bollards look like. Thirty feet high on the backside. And youll see, on the inside, there was a time
THE PRESIDENT: Come on over here, if you want. You can bring the cameras. Its sort of interesting.
GENERAL SEMONITE: where people were worried that maybe you could negotiate you could negotiate through the bollard.
So what the bollard is now, again, is that there are two pieces of rebar 12 feet long that are inside the bollard. And then, when we put it up, we put concrete in. I wont tell you the depth of the concrete, but it is a pretty substantial obstacle to be able to go through.
And I would defer to you, Commissioner, for anything else you want to add.
ACTING COMMISSIONER MORGAN: Yeah. Thanks, General. So a very important part of this and thats why the President was talking about the (inaudible). Right here, what we part of what the wall gets is, is it gets the men and women of CBP, specifically Border Patrol, operational capacity to get to the area where people are trying to illegally cross.
Before the old landing style they could cut through that in seconds. Sometimes, they could come in a vehicle and just knock it over, and literally, within seconds, they were in the United States illegally. This makes it almost impenetrable.
Right now, theyve had four attempts to cut through this. All four times its failed. Border Patrol has been able to respond and interdict those individuals.
This, right here this design its a game changer.
THE PRESIDENT: And the reason we pour the concrete afterwards is because its too heavy to lift when the concrete is poured in. So we put it up and we pour the concrete. A lot of people dont see that. But we pour the concrete afterwards.
So you have the rebar, you have the steel, and then you have concrete. And its hardened concrete. Very powerful concrete. What is that 4,000 pounds or 5,000-pound concrete?
GENERAL SEMONITE: That would be 5,000, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Thats a very strong thats a very powerful concrete. And a lot of technological advances have been made with concrete. It sounds pretty simple, but its not. Its a very powerful concrete.
So you have the rebar, you have the outer crust, and you have the inside is concrete. And its pretty amazing. And, again, the concrete is poured after its up. They pour it through funnels and cover much of the territory of the bollard.
GENERAL SEMONITE: Mr. President, also, this is a great view to look at the anti-climb. I defer to the Commissioner to explain what that panel does.
ACTING COMMISSIONER MORGAN: Hey, you know what? Id actually turn this over right now to our chief patrol agent right now, Agent Harrison. Hes really going to be able to give you, from an agents perspective, exactly the magnitude of what this wall the operational capacity gives the Border Patrol agents.
AGENT HARRISON: Thank you, Commissioner and Mr. President. So, so you know, sir, this is the wall that the agents asked for. And they wanted me to tell you personally that they appreciate this and not only this here, but the extension that its bringing the secondary out, further out. They really appreciate it. It makes them safer
THE PRESIDENT: Right. Youve been great. You guys have been great.
AGENT HARRISON: it makes the community safer, and it allows us to make that apprehension here in the border zone, as opposed to getting in vehicles and getting in pursuits on the highway. We want to make that apprehension here.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you know, just in terms of the quality, I came with the Border Patrol we worked with them very closely. I said, Fellas, how about doing a less expensive version? They said, Well, this is the version that works including the poured concrete in the steel, with the rebar and everything else. Thats the Rolls Royce version.
Then I said, Well, fellas, how about doing one wall instead of two? In a lot of areas, we have two where you have tremendous amounts of people on the other side trying to break through. We know exactly where those areas are Tijuana being over here, as I said. And they said, Well, sir, two works much better in these areas. A lot more expensive. So, we have the one side, on the border 18 [feet]. And then we have over here, 30 feet.
And I think one of the things you were asking, Mark, and wanted somebody to explain is the protection on top how that stops. Its an anti-climb device, if you look at the steel on top. Its also structural, but actually it was there, more importantly, for anti-climb.
Do you want to explain that? The panels up top.
AGENT HARRISON: So its one thing to figure out how to navigate the vertical posts, but the transition at the top makes the climb orders of magnitude more difficult. It requires different equipment, different tools, different skills. And so its the change, as we get to the top, that adds to the protection of that fence, sir.
ACTING COMMISSIONER MORGAN: And, again, anything that we can do to give the Border Patrol agent even a few more seconds, a few more minutes to respond thats a game changer.
And, sir, if you dont mind, I think this is important to talk about. The chief patrol agent just mentioned is that theres a false narrative out there that this wall is the Presidents vanity wall. Im here to tell you right now thats false. This President, this administration what they did is exactly what the President just explained. He reached out to the experts to the Border Patrol agents that are on the frontlines every single day, risking their lives protecting this country, enforcing the laws that Congress enacted. He reached out to those agents, to those line agents, and asked, What do you need to do your job more effectively to secure and safeguard this country? And those Border Patrol agents said, We need this. So, this President thank you. You listened to the agents and you gave them exactly what they asked for.
THE PRESIDENT: This is your maximum that you can do. And one thing we havent mentioned is technology. Theyre wired so that we will know if somebody is trying to break through. And you may want to discuss that a little bit, General.
GENERAL SEMONITE: Sir, there could be some merit in not discussing that.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay. (Laughter.) I like that. That was a great answer. Ill just tell you theyre wired, okay? Theyre wired. Theyre, technologically, very advanced. All set up for cameras any place we want. We have all of the everything we need. But its all set up for cameras, for anything. And youve been hearing drone technology theyre all wired out for drone technology. Anything you want, we have.
And, frankly, this is the right time to do it. Because to do it later, after its built is very expensive. This way, its mostly just adding wire. So were all set up to adapt.
And thats the story. We have certain areas like this, where you have double walls. If you look behind, you can see how it goes up the hill. And that goes many miles in that direction. And were starting now many miles in this direction.
We also have it all fits together like a puzzle. How many sites would you say, over the next period of time, will have been started construction?
GENERAL SEMONITE: Sir, probably about 35 sites. At any one given point, all working and some of the contractors, actually if theyre building five miles, they might having one on one end, one on the other, and one in the middle, so they get the maximum amount of people building at the same time.
THE PRESIDENT: So we have different bids and different contractors. This is one contractor an excellent contractor, by the way. Theyre doing a really good job. But we have many contractors bidding on many different parts in different states in Arizona; New Mexico, where I just left. We have great contractors bidding, and were starting walls in New Mexico. The Arizona wall are moving along really well. Theyre really moving along rapidly, and they need them desperately.
And part of the beauty sometimes youll see the tunneling, where they go under the wall. Here, this goes down the concrete goes down very deep. Its very hard to tunnel. You cant tunnel. Its actually dangerous. But, at a certain point, you hit rock, so you cant tunnel. So we have it covered underground. We have it covered over ground. And this is as I said, this is the finest you can do. I said, Lets do it differently. We dont have to go 30 feet. They said, Sir, if you dont do 30 feet, it wont be the same, because of the climb.
We actually built prototypes and we have, I guess you could say, world-class mountain climbers. We got climbers. We had 20 mountain climbers. Thats all they do; they love to climb mountains. They can have it. Me, I dont want to climb mountains. But theyre very good. And some of them were champions. And we gave them different prototypes of walls, and this was the one that was hardest to climb.
And weve all seen the pictures of young people climbing walls with drugs on their back a lot of drugs. I mean, theyre unbelievable climbers. This wall cant be climbed. This is very, very hard.
And what the panel does on top, as I said, is structural, but its also very hard to get by panel. Plus, its designed to absorb heat, so its extremely hot. The wall is you wont be able to touch it. You can you can fry an egg on that wall. Its very, very hot.
So if theyre going to climb it, theyre going to have bring hoses and waters water. And we dont know where theyre going to hook it up, because theres not a lot of water out here. So its a very, very hard thing to climb.
We were thinking about an all-concrete wall this is a much more expensive version but they want to be able to have a vision in through looking through Mexico, looking in both directions. They have to be able to because otherwise you have a block; you cant see whats going on on the other side. They can build literally, they could have a group of some pretty tough people out there. And we dont want to do that.
You may want to explain that. Why would you want you need this vision. It was so important. Because, frankly, an all-concrete wall would have been a much less expensive wall to build. But from the standpoint of Border Patrol, they were very much opposed to it.
Go ahead.
AGENT HARRISON: So, sir, as you mentioned, it our agents patrol along these walls.
THE PRESIDENT: Right.
AGENT HARRISON: And as they get closer to that, being able to see the threat through the wall prior to a rock coming over the fence or something else coming over the fence at them is just its an officer-safety thing, sir. And we appreciate it.
THE PRESIDENT: Good. Yeah. It worked out. And I understood.
Its sort of interesting; I always envisioned maybe its a solid concrete wall. And that would have been easy to do. But every time I had a meeting with Border Patrol, with ICE, with the General, with the everybody involved with Kevin, with Mark, they said, Sir, we have to be able to see through. If you dont see through, this thing is not going to work. Its not going to be a good situation.
They even talk about things where somebody would be talking on one side of the wall and they would throw up bags of drugs that weigh 100 pounds. They would catapult it up and over the wall. And it was I mean, weve had instances where people got hit on the other side because you dont see whos over there. So having the wall, though its more expensive, but its the right thing to do.
And people that have seen it other countries are now coming, as you know, and theyre studying the wall, because other people are thinking about something. The only thing is, Im not sure that they can afford a wall like this. This is
Q Which countries?
THE PRESIDENT: This is really I will tell you at a certain point if I get their approval. Weve had three of them already. Theyre coming and theyre studying the wall. But Ill let you know. If I can get their approval, Ill give that.
Who asked that? Jeff?
Q That was me.
THE PRESIDENT: Ill give you that information if I can. I want to ask their approval first, okay?
So thats pretty much it. Again, the President of Mexico has been great. The soldiers who are right outside we have a lot of soldiers right now theyve been great. Twenty-seven thousand, I think, is the number, as of today.
And this will be something very special. I want to thank Mark. And I want to thank Kevin. And I want to thank you. Really fantastic job theyve done. The whole the whole group. Border Patrol has been incredible. And the knowledge that youve imparted who would think this is what we had to do? But thats it.
When you look down here, youll see on a more flat area this is fairly flat youll see what the wall looks like, and its pretty impressive.
If the cameras can look down here and these are the real people. These are the workers that put up the wall, by the way. All of these guys, they dont do as much of that. (Laughter.) But these guys do a great job, but we appreciate it, fellas. These are the ones that are here.
Each one of these is considered a panel. When they said how many panels are you going to put up?
GENERAL SEMONITE: Over 44,000 are in right now, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Forty-four thousand are already in. Each one of these if you look theyre theyre together. So each one of these, I think, they have so they would have yeah like eight? Eight.
ACTING SECRETARY MCALEENAN: Yes sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Eight bollards.
ACTING SECRETARY MCALEENAN: Right.
THE PRESIDENT: And each one of them so I guess its mostly an eight bollard. We also have some very sophisticated openings when you have to get the Border Patrol through or various people through to the other side. We have some really beautiful openings that work, I hear, really well. I hear we finally figured that one out, right?
Thats that was not an easy thing to figure out because of the weight. The weight is its tremendously heavy.
But if you look down here, youll see what the wall looks like. And the beautiful thing is that people are seeing that were not going to do in another week, I understand no more catch and release. Were not allowing people into the country at all anymore. Nobody is coming in unless theyre coming in legally. Theyre coming in through a process.
We have it covered between 27,000 Mexican soldiers. And, really, now the wall is starting to kick in very big. San Diego was just they were just thanking me for the wall we built in San Diego. Its like they said its a difference of day and night. They actually said, Its 100 percent.
The only thing is we have to now expand it out. The only way they get through to walk many, many miles in the opposite direction one way or the other and go around it. But going over it is impossible is virtually impossible. But they were very, very happy with what weve done.
So the days and I tell you this very strongly: No more people can come in. We wanted Congress to help us. It would have made life very easy. And we still want them to get rid of loopholes, but weve done it a different way. Weve done it with the help of Mexico. Weve done it with the help of Border Patrol. And weve done it with the help of Kevin and all of your great people, and Mark. Weve done it a different way.
We still want them to do it because it would be a little bit easier, but Congress wouldnt do it. When I say Congress the Democrats just wouldnt do it. So now we have a world-class security system at the border, including the highest technology. I would think that theres no place like this anywhere. Theres no place has anything like this or even close to it.
Now, other places have guards and, unfortunately, they have machine guns and they have electrified fences. You touch them and you get electrocuted. We dont do that. We dont do that. But this is something that is equally difficult to get across.
Okay?
Q Can you explain what was here before? Was there fencing here? Was there anything here?
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah. We had a very low fencing here. In fact, you were here before, I think. We had a very low fencing. It was a like a sheet metal. And people would knock it over, like just routinely. And we ripped it out.
We have a lot of areas where we had that and even less than that, and then we have areas where we had nothing. We had some areas where we just had a pipe along the ground and that, sort of, stopped cars or trucks, but theyd knock that out pretty quickly.
So those are areas but, in this case, we had you saw it it was sheet rock. It was like sheet metal. A very thin used to build runways, as just a form to build runways. And they had a lot of it left over years ago, and they put it up. But it would be knocked down on a daily basis.
Tell them about that.
ACTING SECRETARY MCALEENAN: Can I offer, Mr. President? This is the same area that we had the prototypes built. The President was here 18 months ago. We now have 24 miles of new primary and secondary wall in this sector.
The difference that makes for us, operationally is, instead of 3[00] to 500 people crossing a day, were now seeing 30 to 50. And combined with our partnership with Mexico, where people arent being released into the U.S., the traffic in this sector has dropped dramatically. Thats how your strategy is coming into play.
THE PRESIDENT: And the only way you get to 50 is they walk around the areas like this that arent you know, we havent sealed this up yet. Well be sealing this up very shortly, or, in part of this, we have a gate. But the only way you get the 50 nobody is going over the wall. But where we are still building it, thats where they get the 50.
We think its going to be close to 100 percent in the end. I dont think anybody is I guess, maybe, one of the greatest pole vaulters in history can get over the low (laughter) the low one, but its going to be very painful when they land, right?
Q Mr. President, its been about six or seven months since you declared a national emergency here at the border. Do you still consider the country the situation at the border a national emergency?
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah. Sure.
Q And what will how will you measure success? When will you withdraw that declaration?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think I think, really, the success is going to be when the wall is built, when human traffickers cant go through. You can understand, Phil. Right here, nobody is coming through this here. If they got through here, they have go through here. And they drive they make a left turn up here and someplace where they didnt have anything, and they drive into the country and usually go unnoticed. And if they are noticed, its a big deal. Its a big chase goes on.
I think that the we certainly this is certainly a tremendous national emergency because of human trafficking, drugs, and people coming in illegally. And, in many cases, those people have criminal records. And we dont want them in our country.
Q And will troops be here indefinitely?
THE PRESIDENT: The Mexican troops? Indefinitely.
Q No. Any U.S. troops.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, were lowering it down. As we build the wall, we can just about take all of the troops out and Border Patrol takes over. Border Patrol has really been taking over now anyway.
People are hearing about the wall and theyre not coming up nearly as much either. You know, when youre in Guatemala and, by the way, I want to thank, also, Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador. The leaders of those countries have really been working with us very strongly. And in all fairness, they werent at the beginning, but they are now.
And, in a couple of cases in all cases, ultimately, well be doing the safe third agreements. We already have them. In certain instances, we already have them. And were talking about that.
But the thing is, when people see this and its, you know, one of the reasons Im doing it today: People see this and they say, Hey, theres no reason to make that long journey up, because were not getting into the United States.
AGENT HARRISON: If I could jump in, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, please.
AGENT HARRISON: So to your point, although weve had a 43 percent decrease from May to August of this year, were still 55 percent over last year. This is still a crisis. Weve still got high numbers coming.
Q For the Mexicans who do want to come over illegally, is the administration doing anything to streamline immigration?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, they come over illegally. Theyre not going to be able to get over, so theyre going to try
Q Legally.
THE PRESIDENT: and come in. So that if they want to try and come in when the wall is built, it will be virtually impossible to come over illegally. And then were able to take Border Patrol and put them at your points of entry, where you need some extra help and extra protection. And were able to do a lot of things.
But the numbers now are way down. And as the wall goes up literally, as the wall goes up, the numbers go down. But also, the Mexican soldiers have been incredible. Theyve really done a good job.
Q But for the great Mexicans citizens who want to come over legally, are we doing anything to streamline
THE PRESIDENT: No, no. When they want to come over legally, we make it absolutely in my opinion, it will be easier. Theyll have passes. Theyll have whatever were going to sign. Thats being worked on right now. And the farmers wont be hurt at all when we have you know, as we as you know, we have many people coming over from Mexico, and from certain other countries. And theyre coming through legally or theyre coming through with a work pass.
And do you want to explain that maybe?
ACTING SECRETARY MCALEENAN: Sure. I mean, our neighbors from Mexico we have 400,000 that cross the border almost every day. We have two of the biggest, busiest ports of entry in the entire country right here in San Diego: San Ysidro and Otay Mesa. So the border crossing cards for daily commerce, the longer-term visas for employment those are going to continue to be issued for people who follow the lawful process.
Q You said, in 2016, Mr. President, that Mexico would pay for the wall. Do you feel like youve kept that promise?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, theyre paying for 27,000 soldiers, as you know. And I am so we are all thrilled. You know, Mexico has never done anything to impede people from pouring into our country, and now theyre doing just the opposite. Theyve really been incredible.
I also think its good for Mexico, because theyre breaking up the cartels. The cartels were really a problem. If I took 5 percent 5 percent tariff for six months that pays for the entire wall. But at this moment, I dont want to do that.
But if I charged a 5 percent tariff on Mexico with all of the cars and everything else that comes through in commerce for six months, that would fully pay for the wall. At this moment, I dont want to do that because Im really happy with what Mexico is doing.
Now, Mexico is doing this because they dont want to be tariffed. So you can figure that out any way you want. But if I wanted to, for a six-month period, charge only 5 percent, that would pay for the wall and you would have money left over.
Q Is that something thats still on I mean, you say you dont want to do that right now, but is it still on the table?
THE PRESIDENT: If Mexico stopped helping us, that would be immediately on the table. And that would more than pay for it. That would pay for the wall many times over, because it would be for, certainly, a lot longer.
But we dont want to do that now because they have been fantastic. Mexico has never done anything to impede the people from coming in. And now theyre doing yeomans work yeomans work. Twenty-seven thousand soldiers on today.
Yes?
Q Mr. President, there has been a great deal of turmoil at the Department of Homeland Secretary the last several months.
THE PRESIDENT: I dont think there has.
Q Pretty much every person
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
Q leading that agency is in an acting capacity. Are you going to be
THE PRESIDENT: Well, being fired, because they werent doing jobs. And some of them were there for a long time.
Q When will you make permanent appointments there nominations?
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, Im very happy, I can say. I havent announced it yet, but Im very happy with many of the people there. And well be announcing things in the future.
I mean, there were many people that were there for a long period of time, and I wasnt happy with the job they were doing. And who could be happy? They were there for many years. They werent doing their job. And weve made some incredible replacements. And, yeah, Ill be announcing permanents in the pretty soon.
Q But should the American people expect
THE PRESIDENT: I like you know that you know, Phil, I like I like having non-permanent, to a certain extent. It gives me more flexibility. I like having acting. I like the word acting, because it gives me great flexibility.
But at a certain period of time, well be making permanent positons.
Q Is it not unfair for the American people to expect some stability now
THE PRESIDENT: No, I think we have tremendous stability.
Q in that agency, especially if theres a national emergency going on?
THE PRESIDENT: I think we have tremendous I mean, thats the way you write. But I think we have tremendous stability. I think weve never had a border when this is completed, there wont be a border anywhere thats a border like this.
And a big beneficiary, frankly, is going to be Mexico. And one of the things that is happening, and Ive heard it from the top echelons on Mexico, is theyre breaking up the cartels. The cartels have been disaster. And thats a good thing for Mexico because they have their own problems.
No, we have acting people. And the reason theyre acting is because Im seeing how I like them. And Im liking a lot of them very, very much.
We also have people that Ive let go that have been here for many, many years and have done a bad job and I let them go. And if you call that turmoil I dont call it terminal I really I really dont say thats turmoil. I say thats being smart. And thats what we do.
And the structure that you see I wanted to have you here, because nobody would believe this unless they see it. I hope youre impressed. But nobody would believe it. This is top of the line.
And I went to the General General Semonite. I said, General, can we do a less expensive version? He said, Yes, sir, but it wont be good like this. He said, This is something that you cant cut through. You cant use welders to cut it. You cant cut it down. Its the real deal. And we can do a less expensive, but it wont be it wont be like this. And I think you see that.
Q (Inaudible) from San Diego. We really appreciate it. We are dealing
THE PRESIDENT: Made a big difference, right?
Q We are dealing with the homeless issue as well, and you said
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thats a different issue. And Ill be talking about that soon. But you do have a homeless issue. And in the case of San Diego, the mayor is doing the right thing. Hes doing a good job.
In the case of Los Angeles, its a disaster. In the case of if you look at San Francisco, its a total disaster whats happening, where theyre going to ruin those cities. And I were going to get involved very soon on a federal basis if they dont clean up their act.
One of the things were very upset about and angry about is were paying a lot of money to Los Angeles to build the subway system billions and billions of dollars. And yet, you have tents all over the place. And you have you really have a sanitary condition, because this water is rushing into the ocean and this is supposed to be storm water. Its not supposed to be sewage. And its turning out to be sewage.
And if these Democrat, liberal politicians dont straighten it out, the federal government will have to come in. Were not going to lose cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, and others that are great cities. Were not going to allow that to happen to our cities.
And we also want to take care of the people. And Ill even put the people first. Lets say were going to take care of people. But they shouldnt be living like that and its destroying the city. And theyre being destroyed. Theyre being further destroyed.
But thats for a different day. Its going to be very soon though. Were going were working on that right now. Its a very good question. Okay?
Q Mr. President, all told, how much is this border wall costing the United States? And where is that money coming from?
THE PRESIDENT: So its coming from various sources. Weve had tremendous Supreme Court victories over the last short period of time youve all reported on them and its allowing us to do the proper job. And its also allowing us to work with the Army Corps of Engineers, where we have very talented people, like the General, who are getting it done.
You may want to comment on this section. How is this being paid for, General, as an example?
GENERAL SEMONITE: This was through regular, normal congressional appropriations. Part of this was in FY17. Part was in FY18. But it came through CBP appropriations.
Q And what about the (inaudible), because the drugs are just
THE PRESIDENT: Ill give you an example: You know, they tried to stymie us by saying $1.6 billion, but only for renovation. Well, if they have a little 8-foot wall, 7-foot wall, or 10-foot wall thats like, you know they just pull down the panel and they walk across. And if we rip that down, I guess you could say thats renovation. So, you know, weve used some of this (inaudible). Some of this comes right out of the budget. Much of the wall comes out of the budget.
But if we have even a small piece of steel going around, thats called a renovation, because we take the piece of steel out, we put up a 30-foot wall. And so, in many ways, that works very much to our advantage.
Q Did you expect to have more of this done when you were talking about it in 2016?
THE PRESIDENT: No, I think that Ive always heard 500 miles. That was always like a you know, a number, because, you know, you look behind and you see, even here, were going up the side of the mountain. But in some cases, you cant. Its very, very hard to traverse. In some cases, you have areas that nobody is going to even get near.
So the number I heard was 500. What were going to do is were going to stop at anywhere from 400 to 500 and were going to see where else we may need something. And we can add pieces to that. But you really wont know until you stop, because youre going to have tread paths. Its like, you know where are they going to go? Where are they going to walk?
So were going to get up to about 400 and then were going to look and see whether or not we have to go much more than 470, 5-, 500. It could be, at maximum, I would say, 550. So we might add another 50, but we wont know that until its complete.
Q Does that mean you dont think you need a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexican border?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you couldnt even do it, because in some cases you have rapidly moving rivers, which are, in many ways, more effective than a wall. In some cases, you have mountains and theyre very dangerous mountains, which, in many cases, are more effective. So you wouldnt need that.
You have a little bit less than 2,000 miles, and you have 500 miles where its really space where people can come through. And you may have a little bit extra, but about three quarters of it is covered by natural terrain, where the terrain doesnt allow people to get through.
Q Mr. President, you said earlier that you wanted the wall to be painted black
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
Q and have the spikes at the top.
THE PRESIDENT: I do.
Q Why did you
THE PRESIDENT: I do.
Q go against that?
THE PRESIDENT: The General feels that were better off letting it be a natural rust, letting it be the way it is. Well make a determination as to painting it later. This will be a good strong rust color. And well see. Well make that its not a big deal. The black attracts more heat, even than this color. But this is your natural steel and I think were going to see how it works out. We can paint at it at a later date if we decide to do it.
GENERAL SEMONITE: I think the real the real issue though is that and it goes back to economics. And so when you are able to use that money to be able to get more miles, therefore youre able to resist the threat better.
THE PRESIDENT: Its not a huge amount of money, but its enough to build many you know, quite a few more miles. And I think we want to do that. And we can paint it at any time. We can paint it later on.
Okay?
Q Can we just ask you again quickly about Iran, Mr. President?
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
Q About do we should we expect to see military strikes coming soon? And John Bolton apparently was critical of you today both your policies on Iran and on the Taliban.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I was critical of John Bolton for getting us involved with a lot of other people in the Middle East. Weve spent seven and a half trillion dollars in the Middle East. And you ought to ask a lot of people about that.
We are doing it the right way. Were doing it the smart way. Its very easy to go in. We could go in in one instant. Just one phone call, we could go in. And well see and that might happen. That might happen. But we will we will see what we will see.
John was not able to work with anybody and a lot of people disagreed with his ideas. And a lot of people were very critical that I brought him on in the first place, because of the fact that he was so in favor of going into the Middle East. And he got stuck in quicksand. We became policemen for the Middle East and its ridiculous.
So and Ive always felt that. I always felt it. From day one, I felt it. Even though I wasnt in government, I felt it. But I think that you will see what happens and well see what happens.
Q He also said, on your North Korea policy, that negotiations with the North Koreans were doomed to failure, today.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, its easy to say that. He may be he may be right and he may be wrong. I mean, he lets see what happens. Only time will tell.
In the meantime, for three years, theres been no nuclear testing. Weve gotten our hostages back. Weve gotten our great soldiers back who were killed many of them. And many more are coming back. We have many more coming back. And the families of those we call them our heroes. And they were our heroes. And theyre coming back.
And the relationship is good. So I think thats better than somebody that goes around saying we want to use the Libyan model. He said the Libyan model. That set us back very badly when he said that. So I think John really should take a look at how badly theyve done in the past and maybe a new method would be very good.
Now, with all of that being said may be a very powerful attack. Weve never had a military as strong as our military right now because of what weve done. And when I first came into this position, our military was in very, very depleted, sad shape.
Q And you mean a powerful attack against whom, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: Im not saying anything. Im saying there may be a very powerful one, and maybe it wont be necessary. Well see.
Q With regard to Iran?
THE PRESIDENT: But I will tell you, guys like Bolton and others wanted to go into Iraq, and that didnt work out too well, all right? That didnt work out too well. That was a horrible idea. It was
And I put him in anyway. And, frankly, everybody knows: If you move wrong, he wants to you know, he doesnt realize that you get stuck. You get stuck. And they got stuck. And Im unsticking it. Okay? Im unsticking it. And were doing a great job.
North Korea well see what happens. And, frankly, in the Middle East, well see what happens. Its very fluid. A lot of things can happen. Rough things and not such rough things.
Q Mr. President, how about the Fed? Did you see
THE PRESIDENT: And, by the way: very, very easy to go in. One phone call we go in. Thats a very easy thing. And it doesnt have to be today. It can be tomorrow, and it can be in two weeks from now. You understand.
Q Mr. President, the Fed cut the rate today. Your reaction on Twitter was not favorable.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think its fine. I think that, frankly, they should have acted faster. They raised far too quickly and they lowered too soon.
And you look at Germany, where theyre actually getting paid money to loan money. They get paid to loan money. Japan gets paid to loan money. And were a much better credit than anybody anybody in the world. Were a much better credit. And because of our Fed, were actually paying interest.
So Im not a fan. We have no inflation. We have an unbelievable economy. And we have no inflation. Thats a very big thing, Peter.
So, he just did this a little while ago. Some people thought he might do 50, instead of 25. He did 25. I figured hed probably do 25. He I think that they made some mistakes. And the mistake was he raised too fast and he lowered too slow.
But, despite that, we have a great economy. We have the greatest economy in the world. Were doing really well. Our businesses are doing very well. And regardless but I thought it would give us an advantage. When other countries are doing it and were not doing it, it becomes a little bit tougher, competitive-wise. But were so much better than everybody else, it really doesnt matter.
I want to just thank everybody. This is I hope you folks see the level of talent thats involved here, the level of quality thats involved here. If you came back here in two months, you would see this would be a paved road, right through the middle. And youll have Border Patrol all over the place. But theyre not going to have to work too hard because nobody is getting over the wall. And if they get over the first one, they sure theyre not getting over the second one.
And, I think, most importantly, I want to thank you folks. Great job. Really great job.
PARTICIPANT: Mr. President, there is a tradition here on the border that anyone who works on the wall signs the wall for us. Would you be
THE PRESIDENT: Sign it.
PARTICIPANT: Would you do that for us today?
THE PRESIDENT: Ill sign it. Lets go. Im going to sign it.
Thank you very much. See you back on the plane. Maybe well speak on the plane.
END
3:48 P.M. PDT
One thing they didn't mention here that I really like, or mention anywhere afaik, admittedly perhaps because it isn't true, but I think probably is true, is that this wall will be very cheap and easy to repair when the cartels, human smugglers, etc., do damage to it trying to get through.
Explosives, ramming it with a tank, etc., doesn't matter. Rush in, replace a few bollards or even an entire panel of them, allow the concrete to dry and, BOOM, good as new - elapsed time 24 hours.
“this wall will be very cheap and easy to repair”
It has already been proven in practice.
We have had bollards in some high traffic areas (like Nogales) for about two decades already.
Operations and Maintenance costs are quite low. Breaches (cutting or breaking through) are rare - basically just when the bollards are not under observation, and breachers can set up shop to work on them for a long time, with sparks flying like a fireworks show.
The new wall system is wired with alarms and sensors, and is under persistent surveillance by cameras that are monitored by operators in command centers, as well as by AI software, which will cue the operators, and slew the cameras in on suspicious things it recognizes, like people, ladders, or heat events like sparks from saws.
If the bollards are guarded and monitored, there is essentially no maintenance cost for them; just the roads, lights cameras and such.
This man has fulfilled more promises, and made the country better than any President since ROnald Regan...and I have to say, he’s a close second, if not ahead of ROnnie.
OVERTURN THE PROSECUTION OF GENERAL MICHAEL FLYNN
https://www.ipetitions.com/petition/petition-throw-out-general-michael-flynns-prose
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.