The 30-second
ad will be broadcast in Iowa and New Hampshire from Tuesday, costing $2
million a week ahead of the state's first-in-the-nation voting contests,
his campaign said.
The
commercial spotlights his call for a ban on Muslims entering the United
States, pledge to crush the so-called Islamic State extremist group and
promise to end illegal immigration from Mexico.
"The
politicians can pretend it's something else but Donald Trump calls it
radical Islamic terrorism -- that's why he's calling for a temporary
shutdown of Muslims entering the United States," says the voiceover.
"He'll
quickly cut off the head of ISIS and take their oil," added the male
speaker, referring to the extremists that allegedly inspired the couple
responsible for the San Bernardino killings last month."And he'll stop illegal immigration by building a wall on our southern border that Mexico will pay for," he added, over footage that shows dozens of migrants streaming across a border.
But a fact-checking
website gave the ad a "Pants on Fire" rating, saying the footage comes
not from the Mexico-US border, but rather from Melilla, a small Spanish
enclave thousands of miles across the Atlantic Ocean on Morocco's coast.
PolitiFact
said it traced the footage to an Italian broadcast from May 2014 of
people crossing the border from Morocco into Melilla and said
RepubblicaTV attributed the video to the Spanish interior ministry.
Trump's
campaign said the footage was "intentional and selected to demonstrate
the severe impact of an open border" and the "very real threat" to
America by not building a wall on the Mexican border.
"The biased mainstream media doesn't understand, but Americans who want to protect their jobs and their families do," it said.
Iowa votes first in the nation in the nomination race, on February 1, followed by New Hampshire eight days later.
"I am very proud of this ad. I don't know if I need it, but I don't want to take any chances," Trump said Monday.
The
real estate tycoon, who is funding his campaign, has boasted of saving
$35 million by spending no money on political television ads until now.
He
has led the polls for months, using his bombastic and provocative style
to dominate the media and drive coverage of the campaign.
He
claims to have spent the least money of all the candidates and of still
achieving "the best results," saying, "This is the kind of thinking the
country needs."
Trump has
previously run radio ads and will launch a new one this week featuring
Kathryn Gates-Skipper, the first female Marine to serve in combat
operations, his campaign said.
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