The New York billionaire, who had promised to name his foreign
policy and national security advisers last month, told MSNBC that he
has met with people but made no decision yet on who to advise him on
global affairs.
Asked whether he had a team, Trump said on Tuesday: "Yes, there is a
team. Well, there's not a team. I'm going to be forming a team at
the appropriate time. I've met with far more than three people."
Trump has given hints of the kind of advisor he would hire to
promote his national security policy, much of which is focused on
cracking down on Islamic State. He also promises to gut global trade
deals and build a wall on the Mexican border to halt illegal
immigration.
Asked during a debate last week who he trusts on national security,
Trump had warm words for three men with world views that differ from
one another: former diplomat Richard Haass and retired U.S. Army
officers Gen. Jack Keane and Col. Jack Jacobs.
And on his campaign website last month, Trump announced that he had
received endorsements in Florida from two "top national security
experts."
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2016/Mar/09/images/ads/current/LPL_small%201.gif) Foreign policy experts say they know little about those Trump
supporters.
They are Gary Berntsen, a former senior CIA officer, and retired
Colonel James Waurishuk, a one-time deputy chief of intelligence for
U.S. Central Command during the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq who
also once served on the National Security Council staff.
"These people are not well known in foreign policy circles...I never
heard of any of them," said Harvard professor and former Kennedy
School of Government dean Joseph Nye.
BUSH SNUB
Waurishuk said on Tuesday he would have been happy to give advice if
asked, by any presidential candidate, including Democratic
front-runner Hillary Clinton.
Apart from Trump, however, Waurishuk said that the only other
candidate he had contact with was Republican Jeb Bush, who he says
snubbed him when they met at an event in 2014. Bush "ignored me and
walked away," Waurishuk said.
Former CIA officer Berntsen is perhaps the best known of the three
endorsers. A participant in efforts to hunt down Osama bin Laden, he
later wrote a book entitled "Jawbreaker, The Attack on Bin Laden and
Al Qaeda."
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According to The Hill newspaper, one of its contributors, J.D.
Gordon, has also endorsed Trump. Gordon is a former Navy commander
officer and former Pentagon spokesman.
On Tuesday, Trump described U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions from Alabama,
as someone he would consider for his team, adding that he would make
a decision "in due time." Sessions is a member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee and one of the few senior mainstream Republicans
to endorse Trump.
Sessions is not known as one of the party’s leading foreign policy
voices in the Senate. He opposes comprehensive immigration reform
and supports tight border security measures.
On Tuesday, Trump, dismissed criticism that his harsh rhetoric would
damage America's standing in the world.
Foreign diplomats from Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and
Asia have expressed alarm to U.S. government officials about Trump,
calling his public statements inflammatory and insulting.
The businessman shot back, saying diplomats are upset over his tough
stance on trade and returning jobs to the United States as he seeks
the party's nomination for the Nov. 8 presidential election.
"Every country is ripping us off in trade, and other things. And
they know that won't happen with me. I'm going to bring trade back,
I'm going to bring our jobs back," Trump told Fox News.
(Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu and Patricia Zengerle; Editing
by Alistair Bell)
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