US President Donald Trump on Saturday praised “brave” British soldiers, calling them warriors, a day after remarks he made about NATO troops in Afghanistan were described as “insulting and appalling” by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Trump provoked widespread anger in Britain and across Europe after he said European troops had stayed off the front lines in Afghanistan.
Britain lost 457 service personnel killed in Afghanistan, its deadliest overseas war since the 1950s. For several of the war’s most intense years it led the allied campaign in Helmand, Afghanistan’s biggest and most violent province, while also fighting as the main US battlefield ally in Iraq.
Photo: Reuters
“The GREAT and very BRAVE soldiers of the United Kingdom will always be with the United States of America!” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “In Afghanistan, 457 died, many were badly injured, and they were among the greatest of all warriors. It’s a bond too strong to ever be broken.”
Trump’s initial comments had provoked an unusually strong reaction from Starmer who has tended to avoid direct criticism of Trump in public.
The British leader’s office issued a statement to say the prime minister had spoken to the US president on Saturday about the issue.
“The prime minister raised the brave and heroic British and American soldiers who fought side by side in Afghanistan, many of whom never returned home,” the statement said. “We must never forget their sacrifice, he said.”
Veterans in Britain and elsewhere have been lining up to condemn the US president’s comments to Fox Business Network’s Mornings With Maria on Thursday in which he said that the US had “never needed” the transatlantic alliance and accused allies of staying “a little off the front lines” in Afghanistan.
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