At a rally this week, President Trump spoke in the most depth yet about America's "endless wars" in places like Syria and Afghanistan, and why he says it's important to finally end them.
Sometimes theyโll run to the coffin. Theyโll break through military barriers. Theyโll run to the coffin and jump on top of the coffin. Crying mothers and wives. Crying desperately.
President Trump, October 2019
(Full transcript follows video)
President Trump's remarks:
But it was time to bring our soldiers back home. So I see โ and I will tell you: The hardest thing I have to do, by far, much harder than the witch hunt, is signing letters to parents of soldiers that have been killed. And itโs not only that โ in areas where thereโs not a lot of upside, if thereโs any upside at all, and in many cases, itโs only downside.
And especially when that solider was killed in a Blue-on-Green attack. You know what that is, right? Thatโs where a solider being trained or whatever turns his gun on an American solider. โHere, son. Take your gun. You know how to use it.โ And he takes the gun and he turns it. And he shoots one โ we have many of them in Afghanistan โ in particular, in Afghanistan.
The hardest thing I have to do is signing those letters. Thatโs the hardest thing I have to do. And each letter is different. We make each letter different. And last week, I signed five of them for Afghanistan; one in Iraq; one in Syria, from two weeks ago. And sometimes I call the parents. Sometimes I see the parents. I go to Dover, when I can, but itโs โ itโs so devastating for the parents that โ you know. Itโs so devastating when they bring that boy or young woman out of the back of those big, powerful planes in a coffin, and the parents are there.
You know, we have people that do that. Thatโs what they do. They โ they work that. They accommodate everybody. Thatโs what they do. They an incredible job. And they said โ I said, โThe parents seemed to be okay.โ Iโll get there early. โThe parents seemed to be okay.โ โWell, actually, sir, they arenโt.โ โNo, no. The way theyโre talking. Theyโre really okay, arenโt they?โ โSir, you never know until the back of that massive cargo plane opens up.โ And they walk down holding a coffin with four or five great soldiers on each side of it, representing our various forces. That you never know.
And then I see it. And I see people that were smiling, โOh, Mr. President, thank you for being here. Thank you for being here.โ And I think theyโre doing great. And then, twenty minutes later, weโll be outside when that big plane pulls up and that door comes down, and they are walking the coffin with their boy inside this coffin with an American flag over the top. And theyโre walking that coffin down this ramp. And Iโve seen people that I thought were really incredible the way they were ta- โ I didnโt even understand how they could take it so well โ scream, like Iโve never seen anything before. Sometimes theyโll run to the coffin. Theyโll break through military barriers. Theyโll run to the coffin and jump on top of the coffin. Crying mothers and wives. Crying desperately.
And this is on these endless wars that just never stop. And thereโs a time and thereโs a place, but itโs time to stop.
And just to finish, last Friday, I went to Walter Reed. And I gave out five Purple Hearts to incredible young men โ in this case, all men. And they took a beating. Beautiful people. They took a beating. One couldnโt be there because the beating was so great that he was at a totally different part of the world. He lost a leg. He lost an arm. Ryan. He had tremendous damage, beyond even what these young folks went through.
But Iโll tell you what: For me, itโs very hard when I see that. Itโs very hard. Itโs easy to talk tough. You know, tough guys. All of these tough guys. โLetโs keep fighting. Letโs keep fighting.โ If they had to go to Walter Reed โ where they do unbelievable work. I have to tell you, these doctors are unbelievable. You know, itโs easy to say, โOh, theyโre not theโฆโ Theyโre the best in the world. Iโve never seen anything like it.
One young man, last week, had his nose rebuilt. And they said it was in a thousand pieces. And, I said, โSo where were you hurt?โ He said, โMy face, sir, was almost obliterated.โ I said, โYou have a better face than I do.โ (Laughter.) And he said, โSir, I had a doctor who was unbelievable, and they put it together.โ They said โ he said โa thousand fragments.โ Now, I donโt if thatโs even possible. But a thousand fragments. And they put it together.
And his father, who was crying, came up to me and said, โYouโre not going to believe this, but my son didnโt have a great-looking nose and now his nose is better.โ (Laughter.) Okay? Itโs an amazing thing.
But when you see these โ and the Purple Hearts โ you see this kind of thing โ and I see a lot of it at Walter Reed. And, again, the job those doctors and the people do at Walter Reed, itโs something to be commended.
Thank you all very much. Thank you.
Wow , heart breaking . I was not for leaving Syria but after reading this I want all of our people back home . Donโt see this in msm . Only impeach. So much hate the world over. We need peace not war.
Thank you for sharing this story.
I love this President. President Trump is not perfect and doesnโt speak eloquently like others but he talks like I do straight up.
He means what he says and says what he means.
Promises made and promises kept.
He is doing something right because there are so many out to destroy him.
Thank you again.
That is the most touching and humble comment from a U.S. president in my lifetime. President Trump is the warrior that we need right now. I support him 100 percent! I never will forgive Democrats and Democrat spam media for what they have done to him and his family.
Trump's honesty about how he feels about the endless wars and the trauma to families really touched my heart in a new way and I am listening as He has amazing courage to take a stand otherwise...God bless him for his courage that we ourselves may also have in today's world of conflict.....I pray for him and Melania every day.