A solemn procession. A long salute. A chaplain's prayer.
President Donald Trump traveled to Delaware's Dover Air Force Base on Saturday to pay his respects to the returning remains of four Americans who were killed this week in a suicide bomb attack in Syria.
The bombing, which was the deadliest assault on US troops in Syria since American forces moved into the country in 2015, came as Trump prepares to pull US troops out of Syria.
The president stood solemnly and saluted the remains of civilian Scott A Wirtz of St Louis, Missouri, as his body was carried from a C-17 military aircraft into a waiting van.
Wirtz and the three other Americans were killed in a suicide bombing Wednesday in the northern Syrian town of Manbij. He had been assigned to the Defense Intelligence Agency as an operations support specialist.
The three other transfers were to be conducted privately, with the president observing. He also spent time with the families of those killed.
Trump told reporters as he left the White House on Saturday that meeting the relatives of the country's fallen heroes "might be the toughest thing" he has to do as president.
The trip was not listed on the president's public schedule that was released Friday night, but he tweeted the news in the morning.
"Will be leaving for Dover to be with the families of 4 very special people who lost their lives in service to our Country!" he wrote.
He later told reporters: "When I'm going to meet relatives of some of our great, great heroes that have fallen, I think it might be the toughest thing I have to do as president." The visit came during a budget fight that has consumed Washington for the past month, shuttering parts of the federal government and leaving hundreds of thousands of workers without pay.
Raising the stakes in his dispute with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif, the president on Thursday abruptly canceled her military flight, hours before she and a congressional delegation were to depart for Afghanistan on a previously undisclosed visit to US troops.
Trump planned a Saturday afternoon announcement that was expected to outline a deal the White House hopes might pave the way for the shutdown's end.
Trump has made one other visit to Dover during his presidency, soon after taking office. On February 1, 2017, Trump honoured the returning remains of a US Navy SEAL killed in a raid in Yemen.
Chief Special Warfare Operator William "Ryan" Owens, a 36-year-old from Peoria, Illinois, was the first known US combat casualty since Trump became president.
In a December 19 tweet announcing the withdrawal from Syria, Trump said, "We have defeated ISIS in Syria, my only reason for being there during the Trump Presidency."
A leading US voice on foreign policy, Sen Lindsey Graham, said during a visit Saturday to Turkey that an American withdrawal from Syria that had not been thought through would lead to "chaos" and "an Iraq on steroids."
Trump said before arriving in Dover that IS has lost almost all its territory but "that doesn't mean you're not going to have somebody around."
He also said "we can be pulling back but we've been hitting ISIS very hard over the last three weeks...and it's moving along very well."
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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