Regina Leader-Post

Kelly defends Trump’s call to widow

- JONATHAN LEMIRE AND CATHERINE LUCEY

WASHINGTON • John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff and a retired Marine Corps general who lost a son in combat, delivered an extraordin­ary denunciati­on of a Democratic congresswo­man Thursday, accusing her of politicizi­ng what he called a “sacred” presidenti­al effort to console the grieving loved ones of a slain soldier.

Kelly, in an unexpected and emotional appearance in the White House briefing room, invoked the death of his own son, killed in Afghanista­n in 2010, as he lashed out at Frederica Wilson of Florida, who earlier this week said that President Donald Trump had been disrespect­ful in his condolence call to the family of a soldier killed during an ambush in Niger.

Kelly, speaking slowly and forcefully, said he was “heartbroke­n” that Wilson overheard the conversati­on and used it to attack the president.

“It stuns me that a member of Congress listened into that conversati­on,” said Kelly. “It stuns me. And I thought at least that was sacred.”

Trump has emphatical­ly rejected claims that he was disrespect­ful. But he ignited a storm of his own this week when he boasted about his commitment to calling service members’ next of kin and brought Kelly into the controvers­y by wondering aloud if President Barack Obama had called the former Marine general after the death of Kelly’s son.

Kelly confirmed Thursday that Obama had not called, but he made clear “that’s not a criticism.”

“That’s not a negative thing,” he said. “I don’t believe all presidents call. I believe they all write.”

He revealed that when Trump took office, he urged the president not to make those calls, saying “I said to him, ‘Sir there’s nothing you can do to lighten the burden on these families.” ’

But when Trump indicated he wanted to do so, Kelly revealed to him what General Joseph Dunford, now chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told him when Robert Kelly was killed. Kelly recalled that Dunford said his son “was doing exactly what he wanted to do when he was killed. He knew what he was getting into. He knew what the possibilit­ies were because we’re at war.”

And Kelly added that Dunford told him that “when he died, he was surrounded by the best men on this earth, his friends. That’s what the president tried to say to four families the other day.”

Hs speech was a direct rebuke to Wilson, a longtime mentor to Sgt. La David Johnson’s family, who was in the car with them in Miami when Trump called Tuesday. She said in an interview that Trump had told the widow that “you know that this could happen when you signed up for it ... but it still hurts.”

Robert Kelly, 29, was killed when he stepped on a landmine in Afghanista­n’s remote Helmand province.

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