US Republican Donald Trump has been criticised by the family of a dead Muslim soldier after saying as president he would have kept him alive.
"Had I been president, Captain Khan would be alive today. We wouldn't have been in this horrible, horrible mistake, the war in Iraq," he said.
The soldier's father, Khizr Khan, said it was a "cruel" remark.
He is campaigning for Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who is due to make her first joint appearance with First Lady Michelle Obama.
Mr Khan's son Humayun was killed by a car bomb in 2004 in Iraq at the age of 27.
Their grief became part of the presidential campaign in July when Khizr Khan made an emotional speech at the Democratic Convention attacking Mr Trump for anti-Muslim rhetoric, as his wife stood next to him.
The Republican candidate's reaction, in which he implied the mother was not allowed to speak up, attracted strong condemnation from within his own party.
Speaking to ABC News in an interview aired on Thursday, Mr Trump repeated his insistence that their son would be alive, but added he believed the soldier was a "great hero".
In response, Mr Khan said: "This is the most cruel thing you can say to grieving parents, that if I was there this would not have happened."
In another campaign development, a former Republican congressman said he would take up arms if Mrs Clinton wins.
Former Illinois Representative Joe Walsh tweeted: "On November 8th, I'm voting for Trump. On November 9th, if Trump loses, I'm grabbing my musket. You in?"
He later said he was speaking metaphorically about "acts of civil disobedience".
Meanwhile Mrs Clinton's campaign is dealing with more questions arising from hacked emails published by Wikileaks.
The Trump campaign has seized on the latest dump to suggest the line between Bill Clinton's personal income and the donations for the Clinton Foundation was blurred.
Doug Band, a top aide to Mr Clinton, said in an email that he had solicited donations to the foundation and also generated personal income for him through gifts and paid speeches.
-BBC