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UK 'smart' to have voted to leave EU, will have trade deal signed quickly: Donald Trump

Outgoing US President Barack Obama said last year that UK would be "at the back of the queue" if it quit the EU.

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US President-elect Donald Trump has hailed Brexit as a "great thing", saying the UK was "smart" to have voted to leave the European Union and forecast that other countries would follow Britain's lead to leave the bloc. In his first British interview with 'The Times' newspaper, the billionaire-businessman-turned-politician also promised that a trade deal between the US and UK will be signed "very quickly" under his presidency.

"I think Brexit is going to end up being a great thing," Trump said on Sunday on Britain's referendum vote in June last year to leave the 28-member bloc.

Trump was interviewed for The Times by former UK justice secretary Michael Gove, a writer and MP from Britain's ruling Conservative Party who was a leading figure in the anti-EU campaign. "People, countries want their own identity and the UK wanted its own identity, but I do think if they hadn't been forced to take in all of the refugees then you wouldn't have a Brexit...I believe others will leave. I do think keeping it (EU) together is not going to be as easy as a lot of people think," he said.

Asked specifically about a potential US-UK trade deal, he said: "Absolutely, very quickly. I am a big fan of the UK, we are gonna work very hard to get it done quickly and done properly. Good for both sides. "I will be meeting with (British Prime Minister Theresa May)...She's requesting a meeting and we'll have a meeting right after I get into the White House and...we're going to get something done very quickly."

Outgoing US President Barack Obama had said in April last year that the UK would be "at the back of the queue" if it quit the EU. Trump dismissed that statement, saying: "Obama said, 'They'll go to the back of the line,' and then he had to retract his statement."

Gove, a prominent Leave campaigner during last year's referendum on Britain's membership of the EU, is also a columnist for the 'Times'. His questions covered a wide range of questions around US-UK ties in a post-Brexit era as well as wider international issues.

Trump blamed the decision of German Chancellor Angela Merkel to welcome refugees fleeing war in the Middle East, for jeopardising the stability of Europe. "I think she made one very catastrophic mistake and that was taking all of these illegals, you know taking all of the people from wherever they come from. And nobody even knows where they come from," he said.

In the simultaneous interview with German newspaper 'Bild', Trump said he might contemplate tightening restrictions on Europeans wanting to travel to the US. "I mean, we're talking here about parts of Europe, parts of the world and parts of Europe, where we have problems, where they come in and cause problems. I don't want to have these problems," he said. 

In his characteristic style, Trump made a series of provocative comments about foreign policy, reiterating that he could do a deal with Russia that would result in sanctions being lifted and described the NATO military alliance as "obsolete". "I said a long time ago that NATO had problems. Number one it was obsolete, because it was designed many, many years ago. Number two the countries aren't paying what they're supposed to pay. I took such heat, when I said NATO was obsolete.

It's obsolete because it wasn't taking care of terror, he said. Trump also made a reference to his Scottish-born mother's admiration for the UK and its monarch as a sign of the kind of relationship he wants with Britain under his presidency. "She was so proud of the Queen. She loved the ceremony and the beauty, because nobody does that like the English, and she had great respect for the Queen and liked her. Any time the Queen was on television, for an event, my mother would be watching," he said.

He also revealed that May had written to him just after Christmas with a gift of a copy of Winston Churchill's address to the American people shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour which marked America's entry into World War II. In the letter, the British Prime Minister told Trump that she hoped the sentiment of "unity and fraternal association" between the two countries was "just as true today as it has ever been". 

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