Las Vegas Review-Journal

Why Trump’s wall is a waste of time and money

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Thus, he is willing to resuscitat­e a program that actually worked, but which he sabotaged, in exchange for satisfying his infantile obsession with a great, big, beautiful wall. And while the federal court system has temporaril­y put a stop to Trump’s use of the “Dreamers” as pawns, there is no doubt he will still fight to get his wall.

Simply put, the wall is bad policy. Trump believes it will stem the drug trade and illegal immigratio­n — but walls are easily circumvent­ed. Most of the drugs brought into the United States do not come across areas where Trump would build his wall; instead, they come through legal ports of entry. Drug smugglers have calculated that it is easier to sneak drugs through populated areas in major ports than it is to haul them across empty but unforgivin­g landscapes. And even where border walls currently exist in metro areas, the cartels tunnel underneath or find other ways around. A wall built through sparsely populated land will be easy to avoid.

Nor is the wall likely to halt illegal immigratio­n, which has been declining over the past decade (long predating Trump). Most illegal immigrants coming to this country bypass the hard way in: They do not make the long, dangerous trek across empty deserts where Trump’s unwelcomin­g wall would loom. Instead, they do it the easy way: They arrive in the United States on a legally obtained visa, and then overstay the visa. A border wall does literally nothing to solve this problem.

Moreover, building the wall would likely cost more than $18 billion over the next 10 years — more than half of the $33 billion that is likely to be spent on border security over the next decade. Apparently, Mexico has not agreed to foot the bill.

It goes without saying that the Department of Homeland Security (where I served under the Obama administra­tion) could better allocate that money to keep our borders safe. Indeed, the White House is reportedly asking DHS to make cuts to existing border security priorities in order to fund the wall — including infrared cameras that allow Border Patrol agents to track smugglers and illegal migrants; surveillan­ce aircraft that allow DHS to track narcotic routes far from our borders; coastal intercepto­r boats that protect our shores; and canine units that sniff out drugs and bombs at airports and other ports of entry.

Perhaps worst of all, the proposal would also cut the number of new customs officers — the people we rely on to keep our borders safe.

The wall is a bad idea. It will not do what Trump says, and it will cut workable security programs. But the wall also has a more pernicious effect. America has long been the land of opportunit­y for new immigrants, who have come here seeking better lives. These men and women have improved this country by their work ethic and enriched the American cultural fabric. It is this soft, cultural power that has undergirde­d American leadership for the past century.

But the wall tells the rest of the world: Stay Out. We don’t want you here. America’s walls are going up, and the rest of you can fend for yourselves. You can’t rely on American leadership anymore.

And so Trump’s wall will drag America further down the path of global pariah on which Trump has set it, sliding inexorably toward irrelevanc­e. It is time to reverse that slide — and one place to start is by rejecting Trump’s wall.

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