Trump says he has an instinct for sensing threats

Donald Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop Monday, Nov. 16, 2015, in Knoxville, Tenn. AP

KNOXVILLE, Tennessee — As the hunt for the perpetrators of the attacks in Paris continues, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said Monday that he is uniquely qualified to be commander-in-chief because he has an “instinct” for sensing threats.

“In my book I predicted terrorism. Because I can feel it,” said Trump, speaking to thousands of supporters packed into Tennessee’s Knoxville Convention Center. “I can feel it like I feel a good location.”

Trump, the billionaire businessman and former reality television star, was referring to a passage in one of his books, “The America We Deserve,” in which he warned of the threat posed by terrorism and referenced Osama Bin Laden as a “shadowy figure.” The book was published in 2000, before the Sept. 11 attacks, and Trump has taken to trumpeting the passage to prove that, despite his lack of foreign policy experience, he is qualified to be president.

Just like his nose for scouting a good location in real estate, Trump went on to say Monday, “I really believe I have an instinct for this kind of thing.”

“Nobody knew this kind of terrorism before. But I felt it. And you have to have somebody that has an instinct to lead this country,” he said.

Trump and his rivals have been working to articulate how they would respond to last week’s attacks in Paris, which killed at least 129 people and left hundreds wounded. Trump has been increasingly aggressive in his rhetoric, saying last week that he would “bomb the s— out of” Islamic State-controlled oil fields to choke their financing.

READ: World leaders pressed for response to Paris attacks

He repeated that phrase Monday, sparking chants of “Trump! Trump! Trump!” from the crowd.

“They’ve got to be stopped,” he said. “And they should have been stopped a long time ago.”

He also blamed President Barack Obama at least partially for the group’s rise. “When you’re weak and ineffective, bad stuff does happen,” said Trump, who opposes allowing any Syrian refugees into the country — and vows to deport any Obama does admit.

Instead, he called for building “a big, beautiful safe zone” in Syria where refugees can wait out their brutal civil war. “Take a big swatch of land, which believe me, you get for the right price,” he said.

Earlier Monday, Trump reiterated that he would consider closing U.S. mosques with radical leadership if he were elected president.

“I would hate to do it, but it’s something that you’re going to have to strongly consider,” Trump told MSNBC in a phone interview.

He also said Americans must reassess some of their civil liberties in response to growing threats from the Islamic State group.

READ: Paris attacks may lead to US military anti-IS escalation

“We have to be much tougher,” he said in another interview on CNBC. “We are going to have to give up certain privileges that we’ve always had.”

Surveillance, he argued, should include intelligence-gathering in and around mosques.

“You’re going to have to watch and study the mosques because a lot of talk is going on at the mosques,” said Trump, who complained that New York City, where he lives, has ramped down its efforts to infiltrate places of Muslim worship.

Trump appeared to be referring to the New York Police Department’s Demographics Unit, which The Associated Press reported in 2011 was spying on Muslims and mosques around the city with help from the CIA. The group assembled databases on where Muslims lived, shopped, worked and prayed, infiltrated Muslim student groups, put informants in mosques and monitored sermons.

The NYPD, under Mayor Bill de Blasio, announced it had abandoned the program in April of last year following lawsuits and complaints.

Several dozen protesters gathered outside Monday night’s venue chanting against Trump’s immigration policies. Trump supporters streaming out of the venue chanted, “Build a wall! Build a wall!” back, referring to Trump’s call to build a barrier along the US-Mexico border. Facing each other across the street, both sides broke into competing cheers of “USA! USA! USA!”

Read more...