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JUST IN: Trump NATO slur that UK and allies ‘stayed off the front line’ in Afghanistan ‘is disgraceful’

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Donald Trump has sparked outrage after claiming UK and NATO troops stayed ‘a little off the front lines’ during the war in Afghanistan.

The US President told Fox News on Thursday that he was ‘not sure’ the NATO military alliance would be there for America ‘if we ever needed them’.

We’ve never needed them,’ he said, adding: ‘We have never really asked anything of them.’ ‘They’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan,’ he said, ‘and they did, they stayed a little back, a little off the frontlines’.

He said the US had ‘been very good to Europe and to many other countries’, adding: ‘It has to be a two-way street.’

Following the comments, Labour MP Emily Thornberry, the chair of the foreign affairs committee, called it an ‘absolute insult’ to the 457 British service personnel killed in the conflict.

Speaking on the BBC’s Question Time, Dame Emily said: ‘How dare he say we weren’t on the frontline, how dare he. We have always been there whenever the Americans have wanted us, we have always been there.’

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said: ‘How dare he question their sacrifice?’

Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty, who served in Afghanistan, said it was ‘sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our Nato partners, held so cheaply’.

Tory MP Ben Obese-Jecty, who served in Afghanistan as a captain in the Royal Yorkshire Regiment, said it was ‘sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our NATO partners, held so cheaply by the president of the United States’.

He said: ‘I saw firsthand the sacrifices made by British soldiers I served alongside in Sangin, where we suffered horrific casualties, as did the US Marines the following year.

‘I don’t believe US military personnel share the view of President Trump; his words do them a disservice as our closest military allies.’

Calvin Bailey, a Labour MP and former RAF officer who served alongside US special operations units in Afghanistan, chimed in, saying Trump’s claim ‘bears no resemblance to the reality experienced by those of us who served there’.

And Tan Dhesi, chairman of the Commons Defence Committee, said the president’s comments were ‘appalling and an insult to our brave British servicemen and women, who risked life and limb to help our allies, with many making the ultimate sacrifice’.

America is the only NATO member to have invoked the collective security provisions of its Article 5 clause – that an attack against one member is an attack on all.

That came after the September 11 attack on the World Trade Centre in New York in 2001, which led to a US-led invasion of Afghanistan.

The UK suffered the second-highest number of military deaths in the Afghanistan conflict at 457. The US saw 2,461 deaths. America’s allies suffered 1,160 deaths during the conflict – around a third of the total coalition deaths.

Adding to the backlash following the US leader’s remarks, Social Care Minister Stephen Kinnock said Trump’s claim was ‘deeply disappointing’.

‘There is no other way to say that, I don’t know really why he said them. I don’t think there’s any basis for him to make those comments,’ he told Sky News.

We will always stand up for the values that we cherish: democracy, freedom, liberty to push back against dictators and anybody else that seeks to undermine our values and our way of life – and NATO is at the heart of that alliance.’

Speaking in Davos yesterday, the US President made a similar swipe against the 32-member military alliance, saying: ‘I know them all very well. I’m not sure that they’d be there. I know we’d be there for them. I don’t know that they would be there for us.’

Following the speech, Nato chief Rutte corrected the record to the US President, telling him: ‘There’s one thing I heard you say yesterday and today. You were not absolutely sure Europeans would come to the rescue of the US if you will be attacked. Let me tell you, they will, and they did in Afghanistan.’

Rutte’s rebuttal came after Trump called Denmark – which had the highest per capita death toll among coalition forces in Afghanistan – ‘ungrateful’ for US protection during the Second World War.

For every two Americans who paid the ultimate price, there was one soldier from another Nato country who did not come back to his family – from the Netherlands, from Denmark, and particularly from other countries,’ the Nato chief said.

‘So you can be assured, absolutely, if ever the United States were under attack, your allies will be with you. There is an absolute guarantee. I really want to tell you that because it pains me if you think it is not,’ Rutte told Trump.

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