Vance bungles name of location where US soldiers died in Afghanistan, Internet calls him 'gaffe machine'

Vance bungles name of location where US soldiers died in Afghanistan, Internet calls him 'gaffe machine'
JD Vance confused the name of the location in Afghanistan where 13 American soldiers were killed with a famous street in London (Getty Images)

ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA: Republican running mate JD Vance seemed to experience a verbal gaffe on Wednesday, August 28, during a campaign event in Erie as he confused the name of the spot in Afghanistan, where a bomber killed 13 American soldiers, with the name of a famous street in London.

During the campaign event on Wednesday, Vance got confused with the location name while attacking President Joe Biden for withdrawing American forces from Afghanistan, Raw Story reported.



 

JD Vance experiences verbal gaffe during campaign event in Erie

JD Vance was asked during the campaign event about the incident at Arlington National Cemetery where officials of the cemetery told Donald Trump's campaign that they were not allowed to take photos in the Iraq and Afghanistan section and that no political activity could happen on cemetery grounds.

Vance answered, "There is verifiable evidence that the campaign was allowed to have a photographer there. There's verifiable — they were invited to have a photographer there. There's verifiable evidence that the families of these poor people who had their loved ones die three years ago at Abbey Road. They had, er Abbey Gate. A lot of those 13 Americans were there with the president. They were invited to be there and support them."


PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - AUGUST 6: Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance (R-OH) delivers remarks during a campaign rally at 2300 Arena on August 6, 2024 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Vance is campaigning in several battleground states, closely matching Democratic presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign schedule for this week. (Photo by Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)
JD Vance confused Abbey Gate in Afghanistan with the famous Abbey Road in London (Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

Vance confused Abbey Gate in Afghanistan with the famous Abbey Road in London where the English rock band 'The Beatles' shot a music album.

Vance added, "That's not an insult to the memories of their loved ones. They wanted Donald Trump there and thank God we have a president who stands with our veterans instead of one who runs away from them."

Trump staffers reported over altercation at Arlington National Cemetery 

The officials at the Arlington National Cemetery filed a report over the behavior of Donald Trump’s campaign staffers who reportedly shoved and verbally abused an employee during a photo opportunity for the GOP candidate, the Guardian reported.

The officials confirmed that an altercation took place at the Virginia cemetery on Monday, August 26, after Trump participated in a wreath-laying ceremony for 13 US servicemen and women.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media after his trial for allegedly covering up hush money payments at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 20, 2024 in New York City. Trump faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the first of his criminal cases to go to trial. (Photo by Mark Peterson - Pool/Getty Images)
The officials at the Arlington National Cemetery filed a report against Donald Trump’s campaign staff (Mark Peterson - Pool/Getty Images)

Arlington acknowledged in a statement that one of its representatives was involved in the altercation with two Trump staffers, telling them that only cemetery representatives were allowed to take video and photographs in Section 60. It is an area where recent US casualties, mostly from Iraq and Afghanistan, are buried.

The statement mentioned, "Federal law prohibits political campaign or election-related activities within Army National Military Cemeteries, to include photographers, content creators or any other persons attending for purposes, or in direct support of a partisan political candidate’s campaign," adding that "a report was filed."

It also stated, "Arlington National Cemetery reinforced and widely shared this law and its prohibitions with all participants."

JD Vance called 'gaffe machine' for error in Pennsylvania speech

Readers took to the comments section of the Raw Story article and slammed JD Vance after he confused the name of the place in Afghanistan where 13 American soldiers were killed with the name of a famous street in London.

One reader wrote, "Vance is a perpetual gaffe machine," while another said, "Blaming Biden for trump’s screw up."

One X user remarked, "Vance was a Marine. What a complete POS," while another added, "Good boy JD! Say exactly what your master told you to say. That's a good boy!"



 



 

One individual stated, "I wouldn’t trust this guy alone with a loved one, a pet or an armchair, weirdo," while another said, "If you have to explain, you’re losing the narrative."



 



 

One person noted, "Arlington Cemetery is a place for heroes, not cowards," while another added, "The way that they can fabricate a story with a straight face is both sad and dangerous."



 



 

This article contains remarks made on the Internet by individual people and organizations. MEAWW cannot confirm them independently and does not support claims or opinions being made online.

Share this article:  Vance bungles name of location where US soldiers died in Afghanistan, Internet calls him 'gaffe machine'