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8 Americans Were Hurt in Iranian Strikes, Military Says, Despite Trump Statements

Eight U.S. troops were flown from Iraq after showing signs of concussions from Iranian missile strikes, the military said Thursday, despite earlier statements by President Donald Trump that no Americans had been injured.

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By
Alissa J. Rubin
and
Russell Goldman, New York Times

Eight U.S. troops were flown from Iraq after showing signs of concussions from Iranian missile strikes, the military said Thursday, despite earlier statements by President Donald Trump that no Americans had been injured.

Col. Myles Caggins III, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition in Baghdad, added Friday that the service members’ symptoms began to surface only after the president’s announcement. He said that there had been no other injuries.

The Jan. 8 attack on bases in Iraq’s western desert and near Irbil, Iraq, were launched in retaliation for the killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, a senior figure in Iran’s military, in a drone strike ordered by Trump. The lack of American deaths in the strikes was a relief to U.S. officials, who had feared the killing of the general and its aftermath could set off a larger regional conflict.

During a briefing with reporters Friday, Jonathan Hoffman, a Pentagon spokesman, attributed the delay in reporting the injuries to affected service members returning to duty immediately after the attack and displaying symptoms only days later.

He denied that anyone had delayed the reporting of the injuries out of political considerations. “This idea that there was an effort to de-emphasize injuries for some sort of amorphous political agenda doesn’t hold water,” Hoffman said.

Those who showed symptoms of concussions had been serving at Ain al-Asad Air Base in the west. The base received warning that an attack was imminent, and many service members were in bunkers when the missiles hit. But some service member’s assignments required them to be outside the bunkers during the attack, and the injured were among those people.

The trauma was caused by blast waves that resulted when the missiles exploded, Caggins said.

Although an initial statement left unclear how many service members needed treatment, a military spokesman later said that only eight of 11 service members sent for evaluation showed signs of concussions.

In a speech the day of the attack, Trump had said that no Americans were hurt in the strikes, in which at least a dozen missiles were fired.

“I’m pleased to inform you the American people should be extremely grateful and happy,” the president said Jan. 8. “No Americans were harmed in last night’s attack by the Iranian regime.”

Caggins said that, as is typical with concussions, symptoms manifest gradually in the days afterward.

When Trump tweeted “All is well” in the hours just after the attack, none of those affected by the blasts yet realized they potentially had concussions, Caggins said. “There’s no way the president would have known at the time he sent the tweet.”

Caggins said the first injured service member was not flown out for a medical evaluation until two days later, with the others leaving Jan. 15.

Capt. Bill Urban, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, said that the injured troops were taken to American military sites in Germany and Kuwait to undergo screening, and that “when deemed fit for duty, the service members are expected to return to Iraq.”