The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

11 troops flown to medical centers after Iran strike

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Eleven U.S. troops were flown out of Iraq for evaluation of concussion-like symptoms in the days following an Iranian missile strike that President Donald Trump had said caused no harm to American forces, officials said Friday.

The Pentagon’s chief spokesman, Jonathan Hoffman, said Defense Secretary Mark Esper did not know of the injuries until he was told Thursday afternoon that the 11 troops had been sent for evaluation at U.S. medical facilities — eight in Germany and three in Kuwait. Hoffman said the notificati­on to Esper was in line with military procedures, which he said do not require notificati­on of service member casualties to the Pentagon unless they involve the loss of life, limb or eyesight.

As recently as Tuesday night, Trump said he had been told no American had been harmed in the Iranian missile strike on Jan. 8. The question of American casualties was especially significan­t at the time because the missile attack’s results were seen as influencin­g a U.S. decision on whether to retaliate and risk a broader war with Iran.

Trump chose not to retaliate, and the tensions with Iran have eased somewhat. Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who was in Washington Friday to meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, told reporters that Iranian leaders told him earlier this week in Tehran that their missile attack was sufficient for now as retaliatio­n for the U.S. killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, leader of the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard Corps’ Quds Force.

“They do not want to fight. They do not want war,” Qureshi told a news conference at the Pakistan Embassy.

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