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There Is Already A Big Backlash Against The Deal To Free An American Prisoner Of War

Michael B. Kelley   

There Is Already A Big Backlash Against The Deal To Free An American Prisoner Of War

bowe bergdahl

screenshot/REUTERS

In an email to his parents, Bergdahl wrote:"I am sorry for everything. The horror that is America is disgusting."

Last week the Obama administration traded five Taliban commanders detainees in Guantanamo Bay for Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, the only American prisoner of war.

The backlash has been swift, especially from 28-year-old's fellow soldiers.

On June 30th, 2009, Bergdahl reportedly walked off a U.S. outpost in eastern Afghanistan with nothing but water, a knife, a digital camera and his diary.

He was captured almost immediately, spurring a search that cost U.S. soldiers their lives: At one point, his battalion suffered six fatalities in three-weeks.

There were previous indications that Bergdahl might desert: The home-schooled Idaho native had told a fellow soldier: "If this deployment is lame, I'm just going to walk off into the mountains of Pakistan," according to report by Michael Hastings of Rolling Stone.

Once he arrived at the Paktika outpost, Bergdahl reportedly "spent more time with the Afghans than he did with his platoon." And in emails he sent to his parents, Bergdahl seemed completely disillusioned with the war effort.

At the time, one Obama administration official told Hastings: "We don't give a shit why he left. He's an American soldier. We want to bring him home."

Two Republican lawmakers have accused the president of breaking the law by approving the swap of Gitmo detainees before notifying Congress. The administration agreed that they bypassed legal requirements, citing "unique and exigent circumstances" as justification.

Now that Bergdahl's home, many of his fellow soldiers are venting their anger.

"He walked off," Baggett, a member of Bergdahl's company, told Jake Tapper of CNN. "Nobody knows if he defected or he's a traitor or he was kidnapped. What I do know is he was there to protect us and instead he decided to defer from America and go and do his own thing. I don't know why he decided to do that, but we spend so much of our resources and some of those resources were soldiers' lives."

Former Sgt. Matt Vierkant, a member of Bergdahl's platoon when he went missing, put it bluntly: "I don't understand why we're trading prisoners at Gitmo for somebody who deserted during a time of war, which is an act of treason," Vierkant told CNN.

The counterargument, as laid out by Dan Murphy of the Christian Science Monitor, is that prisoner swaps are part of ending wars and America's only POW is now home.

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