Trump attends ceremony to witness return of personnel killed in Syria

President Donald Trump salutes during a dignified transfer of the remains of two Iowa National Guard members and an interpreter killed in Syria at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Del., Wednesday.

President Donald Trump salutes during a dignified transfer of the remains of two Iowa National Guard members and an interpreter killed in Syria at Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Del., Wednesday. (Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)


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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump attended a ceremony on Wednesday for ​three U.S. personnel killed in Syria by a suspected Islamic State attacker as they were returned to American soil in flag-draped ⁠caskets.

Trump, accompanied by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, traveled to Dover Air Force Base in ‌Delaware for the "dignified transfer" of the bodies in the presence of ⁠their families.

Standing at the foot of an Air Force transport plane ‌on a cold and ‍blustery day, Trump, Hegseth and others saluted as one by ⁠one the caskets were carried off ⁠by white-gloved soldiers and loaded onto a waiting vehicle.

The two U.S. Army soldiers and a civilian interpreter were killed on Saturday in the central Syrian town of Palmyra by an attacker who targeted a convoy of American and Syrian forces before being shot dead, according to the military.

The two Iowa ‍National Guard soldiers killed in Syria were Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, 29, and Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres-Tovar, 25, the Guard said in a statement on Monday. The interpreter was named as Ayad Mansoor Sakat, from Michigan.

Trump on Saturday called the incident terrible, vowed retaliation and referred to the three that were slain as "great patriots."

Three ‌soldiers were also wounded in the attack.

A U.S.-led coalition has carried out air strikes and ground ‌operations in Syria targeting Islamic State suspects in recent months, often with the involvement of Syria's security forces.

Presidents, vice presidents and dignitaries regularly attend the solemn transfer ceremonies at Dover, home of the largest military ⁠mortuary, during times of ​war or conflict that result in the ⁠deaths of U.S. troops.

Contributing: Tim Reid

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