By Ben Kesling 

Some veterans groups and members of Congress expressed disappointment Tuesday after Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert McDonald apologized for claiming he had been in special forces when he had only served in conventional military units.

Mr. McDonald made the claim during a brief conversation earlier this year with a homeless man as he surveyed the state of veteran homelessness in Los Angeles.

"Special forces? What years? I was in special forces," Mr. McDonald said after the homeless man shared his special forces claim. The interaction was filmed by a CBS News crew and broadcast on Jan. 30, during a segment on Mr. McDonald's efforts to get out and talk with homeless veterans during the department's push to eradicate veteran homelessness.

The seemingly innocuous claim made weeks ago was again reported by the Huffington Post on Monday. Mr. McDonald, who was named Secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs last year amid a scandal over falsified patient-appointment records, first apologized Monday for the claim.

"While I was in Los Angeles, engaging a homeless individual to determine his Veteran status, I asked the man where he had served in the military, " said Mr. McDonald in a statement. "He responded that he had served in special forces. I incorrectly stated that I had been in special forces. That was inaccurate and I apologize to anyone that was offended by my misstatement."

Mr. McDonald graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and served as an infantry officer and in the 82nd Airborne Division. He also completed Ranger School, but Mr. McDonald never served in a Ranger battalion or with a unit associated with elite soldiers commonly known as Green Berets.

"In an effort to bond with a homeless veteran, Secretary McDonald told him he was in the special forces," said Michael Helm, national commander of the American Legion, a veteran advocacy group, in a statement. "But a lie is a lie...What a disappointment from the leader of a department whose number one issue right now is the restoration of trust."

"I'm disappointed in Sec. McDonald's comments," said Rep. Jeff Miller (R., Fla.) the chairman of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, one of a number of people expressing disappointment in the false claim.

But while Mr. McDonald's false claim has exasperated some, others are shrugging it off as a misstatement made while comforting a homeless man as Mr. McDonald works to turn around an ailing department.

Rep. Mike Coffman (R., Colo.), a member of the House committee, spoke up as an unlikely supporter of Mr. McDonald on Tuesday. Mr. Coffman and Mr. McDonald are known for their contentious relationship, one that broke into a shouting match during a recent congressional hearing with Mr. Coffman excoriating the secretary's performance and Mr. McDonald pointedly asking the congressman "I've run a large company, Sir, what have you done?"

"The Secretary's misstatement was an error, but it doesn't dim the fact that he served honorably," said Mr. Coffman, a Marine Corps combat veteran. "We should all take him at his word and Washington shouldn't spend the next two weeks arguing about it."

Write to Ben Kesling at benjamin.kesling@wsj.com

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