Albuquerque Journal

Report: Trump disparaged US war dead as ‘losers,’ ‘suckers’

Multiple incidents reported by The Atlantic are denied by president

- BY JAMES LAPORTA

DELRAY BEACH, Fla. — A new report details multiple instances of President Donald Trump making disparagin­g remarks about members of the U.S. military who have been captured or killed, including referring to the American war dead at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in France in 2018 as “losers” and “suckers.”

Trump said Thursday that the story is “totally false.”

The allegation­s were first reported in The Atlantic. A senior Defense Department official with firsthand knowledge of events and a senior U.S. Marine Corps officer who was told about Trump’s comments confirmed some of the remarks to the AP, including the 2018 cemetery comments.

The defense officials said Trump made the comments as he begged off visiting the cemetery outside Paris following his presidenti­al daily briefing on the morning of Nov. 10, 2018.

Staffers from the National Security Council and the Secret Service told Trump that rainy weather made helicopter travel to the cemetery risky, but they could drive there. Trump responded by saying he didn’t want to visit the cemetery because it was “filled with losers,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The White House had blamed the canceled visit on poor weather.

In another conversati­on on the trip, The Atlantic said, Trump referred to the 1,800 Marines who died in the World War I battle of Belleau Wood as “suckers” for getting killed.

Trump emphatical­ly denied the Atlantic report Thursday night, calling it “a disgracefu­l situation” by a “terrible magazine.”

Speaking to reporters after he returned to Washington from a rally in Pennsylvan­ia, Trump said: “I would be willing to swear on anything that I never said that about our fallen heroes. There is nobody that respects them more. No animal — nobody — what animal would say such a thing?”

Trump also reiterated the White House explanatio­n of why he didn’t visit the cemetery. “The helicopter could not fly,” he said, because of the rain and fog. “The Secret Service told me you can’t do it. … They would never have been able to get the police and everybody else in line to have a president go through a very crowded, very congested area.”

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden said Thursday, “If the revelation­s in today’s Atlantic article are true, then they are yet another marker of how deeply President Trump and I disagree about the role of the President of the United States.”

“Duty, honor, country — those are the values that drive our service members,” he said in a statement Thursday night.

Biden’s son Beau served in Iraq in 2008-09.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States