Yuma Sun

Trump reports divide veterans

Alleged disparagin­g remarks bring varying opinions

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FAYETTEVIL­LE, N.C. – In this soldier’s city and across the country, veterans and military families are divided about reports that President Donald Trump made disparagin­g comments toward the military, with some service members bristling at the remarks and others questionin­g whether they happened.

Thomas Richardson, a retired member of the Army’s 82nd Airborne, did not like what he heard.

Richardson was trained to respect the office of commander in chief, but he was rankled by allegation­s in The Atlantic, many of them independen­tly confirmed by The Associated Press, that Trump had referred to fallen and captured U.S. service members as “losers” and “suckers.”

“Usually, you don’t choose those kinds of missions. You agree to serve and you agree to go where your assignment is,” said Richardson, who did not vote for Trump in 2016.

Fayettevil­le, home to

more than 200,000 people, is bordered by Fort Bragg on its northern limits. It was named in 1783 for the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolution.

Katie Constandse, 37, is married to a soldier stationed at Fort Bragg. She is skeptical about the reports of Trump’s remarks and is prepared to stick by him even if they are true.

“If you twist his words or just take one thing out of

context, you’ll always find a way to hate him,” Constandse said. “He’s a human being. He takes a lot of stuff. I don’t see how he has survived for almost four years – the constant barrage of anger toward him.”

Overall, Constandse said Trump’s presidency has been good for service members and their families.

“We don’t need someone who is warm and cuddly,” she said.

At North Carolina Veter

ans Park, Ben Henderson – a soldier stationed at Fort Bragg – was showing his father around the gardens and memorials on Saturday.

Henderson voted for Trump in 2016 and plans to do it again in November, partly in appreciati­on for a recent military pay raise. As for the reports about Trump, Henderson said he had given them little thought.

“I don’t get involved with all that politics stuff. I’m concentrat­ing on my job,” he said.

Trump and his allies have dismissed the Atlantic report as false and depicted the president – who did not serve in the military – as a staunch supporter of service members and veterans.

Military families were broadly supportive of Trump in the 2016 election, and a Pew Research Center survey of veterans conducted in June 2019 found overall that veterans were more supportive of Trump than the general public.

Among that group is retired Green Beret Joe Kent.

At his home near Portland, Oregon, Kent clicked on the Atlantic article as soon as he scrolled across the explosive story on his Twitter feed Thursday evening. He does not overlook headlines regarding fallen service members because his wife was one of them.

Shannon Kent, a 36-yearold senior chief petty officer with the Navy, was killed in January 2019 in a suicide bombing in Syria.

Her husband, now working for an informatio­n technology company, does not believe Trump made the disparagin­g remarks attributed to him.

“I have a really hard time believing anonymous sources,” Kent said. “The new accusation­s just seem so sensationa­l to me.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP SPEAKS on Dec. 26, 2018 to members of the military at a hangar rally at Al Asad Air Base, Iraq. Among veterans and military families across the United States, there are sharply mixed feelings about the new reports that Trump made multiple disparagin­g comments about the U.S. military.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP SPEAKS on Dec. 26, 2018 to members of the military at a hangar rally at Al Asad Air Base, Iraq. Among veterans and military families across the United States, there are sharply mixed feelings about the new reports that Trump made multiple disparagin­g comments about the U.S. military.

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