In a recent paper by Link, it was pointed out that the standard picture of
the neutron star core composed of a mixture of a neutron superfluid and a
proton type-II superconductor is inconsistent with observations of a long
period precession in isolated pulsars. In the following we will show that an
appropriate treatment of the interacting two-component superfluid (made of
neutron and proton Cooper pairs), when the structure of proton vortices is
strongly modified, may dramatically change the standard picture, resulting in a
type-I superconductor. In this case the magnetic field is expelled from the
superconducting regions of the neutron star leading to the formation of the
intermediate state when alternating domains of superconducting matter and
normal matter coexist.Comment: 4 page