general rich clark, the commander of special u.s. operations commands, they both came back to secretary austin and said they made a series of recommendations, again, procedural sorts of recommendations. they did not recommend that anyone involved in the strike that day be reprimanded or be punished for their role. secretary austin concurred or agreed with all the recommendations, so that did not include anything about holding anyone accountable, and that s where we got where we are today. again, i have to point out in the aftermath of this, we keep hearing from the pentagon that they will provide for the family of those who were killed, but we can say that as of today, they still have not provided any payments to the family members and they are still there in afghanistan, hallie. courtney kube, important reporting and thank you for bringing that to us on msnbc. appreciate it. when we come back, we re turning to the awful tornados in kentucky. we ll talk to a survivor who
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Retired Col. Douglas MacGregor has been a vocal proponent of withdrawing from Afghanistan, Syria and South Korea; Jennifer Griffin reports.
As it stands, more than 55,000 active-duty U.S. soldiers – wracked by war wounds and injuries – are deemed non-deployable.
In 2018, more than half of all active-duty soldiers sustained some form of physical trauma – with over 70% diagnosed as lower extremity micro-traumatic musculoskeletal (MSK) or overuse injuries.
And aside from the gaping hole it leaves in the defense and security arena, the medical costs related to MSK ailments across all military branches cost the U.S. taxpayer more than $575 million per year. The U.S Marines using the Sparta Science system were taken at the School of Infantry – West Training Command at MCB Camp Pendleton, California. (Courtesy Sparta Science)