USA TODAY US Edition

Our view: Trump’s visit to the troops was welcome, if overdue

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President Donald Trump’s surprise Christmast­ime visit to U.S. troops serving abroad was as overdue as it was welcome.

Trump, who avoided military service during the Vietnam War, was nearly two years into his presidency without having visited service members in harm’s way. This was in stark contrast to predecesso­rs George W. Bush and Barack Obama, who each made several trips to Iraq and Afghanista­n.

For months, Trump deflected questions about a war zone visit, telling The Associated Press in October that “I don’t think it’s overly necessary. I’ve been very busy with everything that’s taking place here.” That sort of hedging, by a president who plays a lot of golf and consumes a lot of cable TV, contradict­ed Trump’s self-portrayal as a champion of the military.

It didn’t help in November when Trump skipped, because of rain, a trip to a cemetery outside Paris to honor the U.S. dead of World War I.

In damage control mode, Trump visited Arlington National Cemetery this month to see graves bedecked with Christmas wreaths. A far more substantia­l gesture came when he flew out of Washington on Christmas night to Joint Base al Asad, west of Baghdad, even as he was pulling troops out of Syria, weighing plans to reduce the U.S. military presence in Afghanista­n, and searching for a new Defense secretary.

The reality is that troops at war, particular­ly in conflicts as seemingly endless as the ones in Iraq and Afghanista­n, often conclude that few people except their loved ones are aware that American service members are still serving in hot zones. They can feel their sacrifices are forgotten.

An antidote is the arrival of the commander in chief. For Trump to take time away from his own holiday at home to visit with combat-deployed troops reminds them that America hasn’t forgotten. Politics aside, what’s important is the simple fact that he showed up.

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