In just a few hours on Tuesday, President Trump made seven misleading statements: about Middle East politics, during a joint news conference with Prime Minister Saad Hariri of Lebanon; about veterans affairs reforms, in remarks to “American heroes”; and about jobs and health care, to supporters in Ohio. Here’s an assessment.

He claimed Lebanon was “on the front lines in the fight” against Hezbollah, a group allied with the Lebanese president.

Hezbollah is a Shiite militant group that the United States has classified as a terrorist organization since 1997. Its support of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria has drawn criticism from Mr. Hariri. But Hezbollah is also a popular political party in Lebanon. The group counts Lebanon’s president, Michel Aoun, as a staunch ally and has been fighting against the Islamic State in neighboring Syria.

He prematurely said the veterans’ medical records system is “fixed.”

David Shulkin, the secretary of veterans affairs, announced in early June that his agency would adopt the Defense Department’s electronic health records system. Negotiations over pricing and how to carry out the change, according to Mr. Shulkin, are expected to last three to six months. “This journey is just beginning for V.A.,” the department said in a June 28 blog post.

He took undue credit for adding “much more than one million jobs.”

The United States has added 1.1 million jobs in 2017, but it’s a stretch for the new president to take credit for almost half of them. About 216,000 jobs were added in January, before Mr. Trump took office. The 232,000 jobs estimate for February came three weeks into Mr. Trump’s presidency.