Pentagon says 34 US soldiers suffered traumatic brain injury in Iran strike

Thirty-four US soldiers have been diagnosed with
concussion or traumatic brain injury from an 8 January Iranian missile attack
on their base in Iraq, the Pentagon has revealed.
The Pentagon spokesman, Jonathan Hoffman, said on
Friday that eight service members who had been previously transported to
Germany had been moved to the United States.
Donald Trump had previously said that the US
“suffered no casualties” from the attack, which was a reprisal for the US drone
strike assassination of the Iranian general Qassem Suleimani.
Questioned later about reports of brain injury,
Trump downplayed their severity: “I heard that they had headaches. And a couple
of other things. But I would say, and I can report, it is not very serious.”
But Hoffman confirmed the injuries on Friday,
adding: “This is a snapshot in time, what he wanted to make sure is that you’re
provided with the most accurate numbers.”
Of the 34 injured service members, 17 have returned
to duty and the other 17 were taken to a US military hospital in Landstuhl,
Germany. Of those taken to Germany, eight were deemed serious enough to be
flown to the US on Friday. Hoffman said that if the symptoms of those in
Germany worsened, they also could be sent to the US. He added that the injured
soldiers both US and Germany were being treated as out-patients.
Michael Kaplen, the chair of the New York State
Traumatic Brain Injury Services Coordinating Council and past president of the
Brain Injury Association of New York State said that he was “shocked at the
ignorant statement” made by Trump.
“To equate traumatic brain injuries as just a
headache is insulting and disrespectful to the thousands of military service
members suffering from the signature wound of the Iraq/Afghanistan conflict,”
he said.
He added that the condition, also known as TBI, is a
“life-altering” injury.
“It’s physical, cognitive, emotional and behavioral
consequences affect every aspect of an individual’s life,” he said. “A brain
injury is only ‘mild’ if it is someone else’s brain. There is nothing ‘mild’
about a mild brain injury.”