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Trump got it wrong on a past Iranian missile attack and again cast aside the US troop injuries as nothing more than headaches

US soldiers standing at the spot hit by Iranian strikes at Ain al-Asad air base, in Anbar, Iraq.

Trump’s inaccurate comments on the injuries echo his previous stance on the over 100 US service members who were diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries after the attacks.

Not long after the attack, Trump told reporters that he “heard that they had headaches and a couple of other things,” but his view was that it wasn’t serious.

“I don’t consider them very serious injuries relative to other injuries that I’ve seen,” he said.

At the time of the 2020 strike, brain injury experts and former US service members told Business Insider about the injuries, saying that Trump’s comments trivialize the severeness of the conditions, which can be slow to appear and can be debilitating.

One former Vermont Army National Guard infantryman who was deployed to Afghanistan in 2009 and suffered a mild TBI in combat told BI that over 10 years later, he still was still waking up with headaches every day, experienced concentration issues, and occasionally had dizzy spells.

Any brain injury, such as a TBI, can leave injured patients with troubling physical, cognitive, emotional, and behavioral issues, some of which may last their entire lives.

Trump’s downplaying on the injuries also ran at odds with the Pentagon, which, in January 2020, acknowledged the potential ongoing issues for service members and said it would “monitor them the rest of their lives and continue to provide whatever treatment is necessary.”

Some of the US service members affected by the attack were later awarded the Purple Heart for their involvement in the attack, but initially, they were denied. One service member who was affected by the Iranian attack told CBS News a few years ago that he was struggling with vision problems, memory loss, constant headaches, and hearing issues.

Iran’s attack on Israel was in response to the killings of a Hezbollah and Hamas leader.

In response to Trump’s comments on Tuesday, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a National Guard soldier and the present Democratic vice presidential nominee, said during the vice presidential debate with Republican nominee Ohio Sen. JD Vance that Trump “wrote off” the troops’ injuries as “headaches.”

Trump’s comments about the 2020 strike came on the heels of Iran’s massive missile strike on Israel, which involved over 180 ballistic missiles. US and Israeli officials said the significant attack was largely intercepted and “ineffective,” with Israel vowing to respond.

In response to the attack, Vice President Kamala Harris said that while “we are still assessing the impact,” the “initial indications are that Israel, with our assistance, was able to defeat this attack.” She said “our joint defenses have been effective.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-lies-again-2020-iranian-missile-attack-us-troop-injuries-2024-10