An Israel-based security company that provided intrusion detection technology for the barrier between Israel and the Gaza Strip has offered to help Donald Trump secure the U.S. border — but suggests that building an actual wall along every section of the border is not the way to go.

Sa’ar Koursh, the CEO of Magal Security Systems, told Bloomberg News that he would be happy to help Trump. “We would join forces with a major U.S. defense company that has experience with such projects worldwide,” he said. “We’ve done it in the past and we would definitely want to do it.”

For Magal, border-wall building is a lucrative enterprise. It has installed perimeter detection systems between the Gaza Strip and Israel, and has deployed its surveillance and intrusion detection systems in the occupied West Bank.

It is also active in securing West African prisons, international sporting events, and is currently bidding for a contract to export its so-called “smart fencing” — a specialized border fence that self-triggers an alarm if anyone touches it — to the Kenya-Somalia border.

The Israeli security industry is no stranger to the U.S.-Mexico border. The American subsidiary of Israel’s Elbit Systems has been contracted by the Department of Homeland Security to build surveillance towers along the border.

Trump has himself cited the Israeli model in the past. “If you think walls don’t work, all you have to do is ask Israel,” he said during a November primary debate.

So we did.

In a Skype interview with The Intercept, Hagai Katz, who handles communications for Magal, insisted that the CEO’s comments should not be read as an endorsement of Trump, emphasizing that his company would take part in securing the border under any administration.

Katz explained that he thinks the U.S-Mexico border could “absolutely” be secured, with undocumented immigration reduced to near-zero levels.

Katz cited the network of fences, walls, and electronic surveillance that Israel erected along its southern border to stop illegal immigration from Egypt. Over Skype, he shared figures showing a large drop in immigration after Israel erected large fences: