US Army POW is released in swap for 5 Gitmo detainees.

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
What's behind the vicious campaign against the last American POW in Afghanistan?

At this point, I'm not sure he was even a prisoner. A whole lot of no one knows anything floating.
The only thing close to maybe credible information is coming from his troop members.
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
At this point, I'm not sure he was even a prisoner. A whole lot of no one knows anything floating.
Expect it to continue until Bergdahl himself answers up.

The only thing close to maybe credible information is coming from his troop members.
That would seem to assume to several things:

1. That no one among his "troop members" had any reason to vilify Bergdahl ... perhaps in order to discredit him unjustly, and divert attention off of their own conduct.

2. People are not prone to repeating what they have only heard second-hand from others as fact, or as direct personal observations (when they actually aren't) ... and that (false) rumor mills don't exist.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
What's behind the vicious campaign against the last American POW in Afghanistan?

At this point, I'm not sure he was even a prisoner. A whole lot of no one knows anything floating.
The only thing close to maybe credible information is coming from his troop members.

It is looking more and more like he deserted his post in combat zone.
 

usafk9

Veteran Expediter
A friend's daughter, who is a Captain in a MI outfit, posted a blurb about it on Facebook. She's usually very tight-lipped about any of her experiences there, but after reading her post, my guess is that there will be a court martial in this young man's future.

Sent from my DROID RAZR using EO Forums mobile app
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I just received an email from my nephew in Germany. His wife just got back from her second tour in Afghanistan. I would do a copy and paste on it and post it here, except there is no way it would get back the word blocking software in here. Needless to say, the word there is not looking good, it seems that it was known all along this guy deserted his post.

My nephew's wife is a captain in a MI unit that just returned from Afghanistan about a month ago.
 
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davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
Expect it to continue until Bergdahl himself answers up.


That would seem to assume to several things:

1. That no one among his "troop members" had any reason to vilify Bergdahl ... perhaps in order to discredit him unjustly, and divert attention off of their own conduct.

2. People are not prone to repeating what they have only heard second-hand from others as fact, or as direct personal observations (when they actually aren't) ... and that (false) rumor mills don't exist.

Very true, thus my use of "maybe". Trying to keep a open mind as things may or may not be as they appear. It is starting to look like a court martial is in his future.
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
lol ... post it - with the full headers (with specific identifying info redacted) ... I dare ya ...
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
We'll have to agree to disagree then ... since it appears to me that it does.
Then you don't know what assume means.

None ... I just recognize that your use of those words in a sentence do not preclude or rule out that you are drawing a conclusion based on something you assume is (perhaps fundamentally) true - as seemingly illustrated by your tacit admission in second quote below (even though you try to frame it as me being correct ... lol ...)
Assume means to take something for granted or without proof (as being true or false). I make no such assumption as to the truth of the accounts, I merely draw conclusions based solely on those accounts. I make no assumptions that there exists any contradictory accounts yet to be heard, and then draw conclusions based on the lack of contradictory accounts. To do so would be assuming to be true that which does not exist. The absence of evidence is not evidence that it exists. That's conspiracy theory stuff.

... "a missing word on conjunction" ?
Should be "or" instead of "on." My apologies. I've never claimed to be typo-free. Just the opposite - I'm loaded with 'em.

Well, tell me at which particular point or place in the sentence you feel there is something missing ... and I'll do my best to clarify it and make it understandable.
"The assumption is that having an epiphany of conscience, morals or ethics, would necessarily prevent him from abandoning his platoon nor his terms of duty..."

As written, I don't understand that sentence. If it was "wouldn't" I could understand it (although I think it would change your intended meaning), or if it was "or" instead of "nor" I could understand it. "Or" makes sense, but "nor" doesn't. Even "and" in place of "nor" would make sense.

That isn't my position - it's yours - and it's logically flawed.
I'm not claiming that it's your position, I'm confirming that you are correct in that it is my position (that there could not be any circumstances where what he did was valid based on his own conscience, morals or ethics). You claim that the conclusion is logically flawed, but it's not. The only way it could be flawed logic is if I were to make assumptions about things and accounts which we do not yet know.

As far as I know, he didn't put anyone in "grave danger" ...
Look, I've never served in combat, but I pay attention. A combat zone is already pretty dangerous, and when something happens that's not suppose to happen and is out of your control, the danger level increases dramatically. When someone from inside a camp just up and disappears without anyone knowing it, the danger level becomes the highest it can get, because the safety of everyone in camp depends on people being where they are supposed to be and doing what they are supposed to do.

Even if he decided to leave - which isn't anywhere near a certainty at this point - it would have been others that may have chosen to do that (put other people in grave danger) in some effort that they believed may have accrued to Bergdahl's (and very likely, their own) benefit ...
It's not like he disappeared and then someone suddenly came up with the hair-brained idea of "we gotta stop what we're doing and go find him and make sure he's OK, and to make sure that the enemy isn't somehow picking us off one by one." Those are the established rules going in - if someone disappears you go find him, not only for his sake, but for the safety of everyone else. Resources must be diverted to search for the missing soldier, resources which could prevent an attack elsewhere. And in this case, that's precisely what happened, as resources were diverted which led to an insurgent attack on a joint US-Afghan outpost which killed two other Americans.

And on the "grave danger" thingie: it's nice drama - but that movie has already played ... although I'm fairly sure you'll have a very receptive audience here ...
Thanks for the dismissive marginalizing. I appreciate it. It's not like the movie was the only place and time that phrase was used, or is applicable.

From a moral or ethical perspective, a commitment made - that was granted and given in good faith based on representations by others (which then turn out to be false) - renders invalid any moral or ethical obligation to uphold the commitment.

It may simply be a matter of "good faith" on Bergdahl's part ... and "bad faith" on the USG's (or others) ... or "breach of contract" ... on the part of the USG's (or others) ...

A failure to exercise good faith and deal honestly, places one at risk of having commitments others have made to one, deliberately broken or remain unfulfilled
First of all, there is no evidence whatsoever that representations made by others to gain such a commitment was false in any way. The commitment made was voluntary and was not conditional on the representations of others. The commitment made was to his fellow soldiers, his unit, and his country. He took an oath to it, and did so of his own volition. If he wanted to back out of that oath there are ways to do it that don't put others in danger, grave or otherwise.
 

paullud

Veteran Expediter
What's really interesting is I wasn't asserting it as a fact or a certainty ... only a possibility ...

That was covered in the little bit you conveniently left out while wearing your editing hat apparently:

"... he sure might have become ..."

Better luck next time ... ;)

The "might have" was referring to reasons he might have become a conscientious objector. I was referring to the part where you definitively suggest that there is something else going on there which was the reason for the edit. Better luck next time with your gotcha moment.

Sent from my SCH-I535 using EO Forums mobile app
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Very true, thus my use of "maybe". Trying to keep a open mind as things may or may not be as they appear.
Yup ...

It is starting to look like a court martial is in his future.
That's certainly what some extreme partisans would want ... anything to get at Obama ... regardless of whether the facts actually support it or not ...
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
The "might have" was referring to reasons he might have become a conscientious objector. I was referring to the part where you definitively suggest that there is something else going on there which was the reason for the edit.
What is that "'something else' going on there" that you are claiming I was referring to ?

Please elaborate ... shouldn't take you more than a sentence or two ...
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Then you don't know what assume means.
LOL ... well ok then ... ;)

Assume means to take something for granted or without proof (as being true or false). I make no such assumption as to the truth of the accounts, I merely draw conclusions based solely on those accounts. I make no assumptions that there exists any contradictory accounts yet to be heard, and then draw conclusions based on the lack of contradictory accounts. To do so would be assuming to be true that which does not exist. The absence of evidence is not evidence that it exists. That's conspiracy theory stuff.
Accounts, accounts, accounts ...

Has nothing to with "the accounts" - which you seem to want to really, really focus on - even though that isn't what my comment referenced or was focused on ...

I'll state it again (sans typo):

The assumption is that having an epiphany of conscience, morals or ethics would necessarily prevent him from abandoning his platoon or his terms of duty ...

Without hearing Bergdahl's explanation for his actions (or what happened - which likely isn't fully known at this point) - and the reasoning behind it - one is limited in properly evaluating the matter.

That is the assumption.

Should be "or" instead of "on." My apologies. I've never claimed to be typo-free. Just the opposite - I'm loaded with 'em.
I do have them myself on occasion ... as you'll see below.

"The assumption is that having an epiphany of conscience, morals or ethics, would necessarily prevent him from abandoning his platoon nor his terms of duty..."

As written, I don't understand that sentence.If it was "wouldn't" I could understand it (although I think it would change your intended meaning), or if it was "or" instead of "nor" I could understand it. "Or" makes sense, but "nor" doesn't. Even "and" in place of "nor" would make sense.
Should have been "or" ... got me too ... my bad.

I'm not claiming that it's your position, I'm confirming that you are correct in that it is my position (that there could not be any circumstances where what he did was valid based on his own conscience, morals or ethics).
Glad we cleared that up.

You claim that the conclusion is logically flawed, but it's not. The only way it could be flawed logic is if I were to make assumptions about things and accounts which we do not yet know.
Precisely (see above)

Look, I've never served in combat, but I pay attention. A combat zone is already pretty dangerous, and when something happens that's not suppose to happen and is out of your control, the danger level increases dramatically. When someone from inside a camp just up and disappears without anyone knowing it, the danger level becomes the highest it can get, because the safety of everyone in camp depends on people being where they are supposed to be and doing what they are supposed to do.

It's not like he disappeared and then someone suddenly came up with the hair-brained idea of "we gotta stop what we're doing and go find him and make sure he's OK, and to make sure that the enemy isn't somehow picking us off one by one." Those are the established rules going in - if someone disappears you go find him, not only for his sake, but for the safety of everyone else. Resources must be diverted to search for the missing soldier, resources which could prevent an attack elsewhere. And in this case, that's precisely what happened, as resources were diverted which led to an insurgent attack on a joint US-Afghan outpost which killed two other Americans.
Yup ... but there is that little matter of the Taliban intercept that Wikileaks published - which indicated that Bergdahl was captured in an attack while taking a dump on the crapper.

True or accurate ?

Who knows ?

But it is another piece of data that needs to be properly evaluated - and then kept or discarded, after being either falsified or found to be true.

Moreover, it appears - based on Hastings reporting - that the unit Bergdahl was in was composed of a bunch of undisciplined, recalcitrant screw ups ...

And that goes directly to their professionalism and character (or lack thereof) ... and possibly their veracity ...

First of all, there is no evidence whatsoever that representations made by others to gain such a commitment was false in any way.
Actually there is - and it's contained in Bergdahl's emails to his father.

If one is willing to grant credence to what Bergdahl's fellow soldiers are saying, then one must at least be willing to consider granting Bergdahl's own words similar credence - until it can be shown that he isn't credible.

The commitment made was voluntary and was not conditional on the representations of others.
You have absolutely no way to know whether Bergdahl considered it to be conditional ... without hearing from Bergdahl himself.

I would argue that based on what we know of his statements (and possibly his actions) thus far, it appears that he may well have considered it to be conditional.

The commitment made was to his fellow soldiers, his unit, and his country. He took an oath to it, and did so of his own volition.
The commitment he made is contained in the oath.

All maudlin musings aside, the oath itself contains nothing whatsoever about his "fellow soldiers" or his "unit" (save for the reference to obey those officers appointed over him and to follow the UCMJ) or his "country" (save for the reference to support and defend the Constitution)

If he wanted to back out of that oath there are ways to do it that don't put others in danger, grave or otherwise.
Well, I'd say: Tell it to Pat Tillman ... but unfortunately we can't ...
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
From yesterday's NYT:

WASHINGTON — Sometime after midnight on June 30, 2009, Pfc. Bowe Bergdahl left behind a note in his tent saying he had become disillusioned with the Army, did not support the American mission in Afghanistan and was leaving to start a new life. He slipped off the remote military outpost in Paktika Province on the border with Pakistan and took with him a soft backpack, water, knives, a notebook and writing materials, but left behind his body armor and weapons — startling, given the hostile environment around his outpost.

That account, provided by a former senior military officer briefed on the investigation into the private's disappearance, is part of a more complicated picture emerging of the capture of a soldier whose five years as a Taliban prisoner influenced high-level diplomatic negotiations, brought in foreign governments, and ended with him whisked away on a helicopter by American commandos.

The release of Sergeant Bergdahl (he was promoted in captivity) has created political problems for the Obama administration, which is having to defend his exchange for five Taliban detainees held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, but it also presents delicate politics for Republicans who are attacking, through surrogates, America's last known prisoner of war.


The furious search for Sergeant Bergdahl, his critics say, led to the deaths of at least two soldiers and possibly six others in the area. Pentagon officials say those charges are unsubstantiated and are not supported by a review of a database of casualties in the Afghan war.


"Yes, I'm angry," Joshua Cornelison, a former medic in Sergeant Bergdahl's platoon, said in an interview on Monday arranged by Republican strategists. "Everything that we did in those days was to advance the search for Bergdahl. If we were doing some mission and there was a reliable report that Bergdahl was somewhere, our orders were that we were to quit that mission and follow that report."


Sergeant Bergdahl slipped away from his outpost, the former senior officer said, possibly on foot but more likely hiding in a contractor's vehicle. "He didn't walk out the gate through a checkpoint, and there was no evidence he breached the perimeter wire and left that way," the ex-officer said.


It was not until the 9 a.m. roll call on June 30 that the 29 soldiers of Second Platoon, Blackfoot Company, learned he was gone.


"I was woken up by my platoon leader," said Mr. Cornelison, who had gone to sleep just three hours before after serving watch from 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. "Hey Doc," his platoon leader said. "Have you seen Bergdahl?"


Platoon members said Sergeant Bergdahl, of Hailey, Idaho, was known as bookish and filled with romantic notions that some found odd.


"He wouldn't drink beer or eat barbecue and hang out with the other 20-year-olds," Cody Full, another member of Sergeant Bergdahl's platoon, said in an interview on Monday also arranged by Republican strategists. "He was always in his bunk. He ordered Rosetta Stone for all the languages there, learning Dari and Arabic and Pashto."


The soldiers began a frantic search for Sergeant Bergdahl using Predator drones, Apache attack helicopters and military tracking dogs. The most intense search operation, leaked war reports show, wound down after eight days — well before the deaths of six soldiers on patrols in Paktika Province in late August and early September. But, complicating matters, some soldiers contend they were effectively searching for 90 days because of clear orders: If they heard rumors from locals that Sergeant Bergdahl might be nearby, they should patrol the area.

Mr. Full, then a specialist in the platoon, said he and other platoon members grew increasingly bitter at the time they were spending looking for Sergeant Bergdahl. "He had sent all his belongings home — his computer, personal items," said Mr. Full, now 25. He said Sergeant Bergdahl used to gaze at the mountains around them and say he wondered if he could get to China from there. Other platoon members said that Sergeant Bergdahl wrote Jason Bourne-type novels in which he inserted himself as the lead character.

The anger toward Sergeant Bergdahl increased exponentially after Sept. 4, when they learned that two members of Third Platoon, which routinely went on tandem missions with Second Platoon and who they believed were also searching for Sergeant Bergdahl, had been killed in an ambush. Pfc. Matthew Martinek and Lt. Darryn Andrews, both of them friends of Mr. Cornelison, died in the ambush. A Defense Department official said it was unclear whether the two men were killed directly because of the search for Sergeant Bergdahl.


Some soldiers have also contended that the Taliban, knowing the units were out searching extensively for Sergeant Bergdahl, chose July 4, 2009, to attack another combat outpost, which was nearly overrun and several soldiers were killed. But American military officers said they saw no evidence that the Taliban started the attack on the outpost because they thought everyone would be out searching for Sergeant Bergdahl.


A second former senior military officer, who also was briefed on the Bergdahl investigation, said there was no direct evidence that diversion of surveillance aircraft or troops to search for Sergeant Bergdahl encouraged the Taliban attacks, or left other American troops vulnerable. "This was a dangerous region in Afghanistan in the middle of the ‘fighting season,' " the officer said in an email, adding that although the search "could have created some opportunities for the enemy," it is "difficult to establish a direct cause and effect."


A review of the database of casualties in the Afghan war suggests that Sergeant Bergdahl's critics appear to be blaming him for every American soldier killed in Paktika Province in the four-month period that followed his disappearance.


Mr. Cornelison and Mr. Full both said they wanted to see Sergeant Bergdahl court-martialed as a deserter. "I'm not going to speak on the political, but I think that now that he's back, he needs to be held accountable," Mr. Full said.


Mr. Cornelison echoed Mr. Full. "I won't get into the politics, but now that he's back he needs to be held 100 percent accountable," he said. "For putting myself and 29 other people in my platoon in hell for 90 days."


Rear Adm. John F. Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said that there was a larger matter at play: The American military does not leave soldiers behind. "When you're in the Navy, and you go overboard, it doesn't matter if you were pushed, fell or jumped," he said. "We're going to turn the ship around and pick you up."
Bowe Bergdahl’s Vanishing Before Capture Angered His Unit - NYTimes.com
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Had to figure this was coming ... it was only a matter of time:

LEAVE SOME COMRADES BEHIND
1:01 PM JUNE 4, 2014

DEAR SOLDIER: WE NEED SOME INFORMATION IN CASE YOU’RE CAPTURED

by DOKTOR ZOOM


bergdahl-generic.jpg

Dear Soldier/Airman/Seaman/Marine:

Thank you for your willingness to be sent wherever it is we’re sending our military forces, for whatever reason we’re sending you there. Your willingness to give your all "for your country" — or, let’s be real, for your comrades, or just not to look chicken in front of them — is greatly appreciated.

However, it has come to our attention that, should you fall into enemy hands, new circumstances dictate that your country may not want to actually bring you back. The standard has changed from "Leave no comrade behind" to "Leave no suitably telegenic comrade behind." To help us decide whether you are fit to be rescued, or even searched for, we need to gather certain information to help us determine whether you are worth bothering with.

1) Do you love America enough? Please explain any doubts you may have about the perfection of our way of life, our economic system, and core American values, as you understand them. Please note that a record of your statements on this form will be kept throughout your term of service, and should you be captured, statements on this form will be compared to any subsequent expressions of patriotism you may make in emails or phone calls to your family, remarks you may make to other members of the armed forces, or things that a guy heard another guy say about what they thought you were like; any discrepancies may be deemed reason to leave you behind.

2) Do you believe in The Mission? We actually don’t care whether you believe in the mission you’re assigned to do. You’re a soldier/airman/seaman/Marine, and you do what you’re told. However, to assist in determining your worthiness for rescue, please let us know now if you think you might at any point in the future express doubts about the morality of any cause you may be sent to support, or whether you anticipate any experiences while deployed might cause you to see said deployment in a negative light. Again, your answer in the space provided will be checked against future statements you may make.

3) Do you have any family members who might make you or the United States look bad on TV, particularly Fox News? Please indicate names and relationships of any family members who might fit any of the following descriptions:

Disloyal

Pushy, loud, or obnoxious

Anti-American

Bearded

Muslim-looking

Wimpy

Flamboyant

Eccentric

Ghetto

Please indicate any family members who speak languages other than American English, and identify the language(s):

Please indicate any family members who may worship deities that are not currently popular:

4) Can you guarantee that you will make every effort to seem neither too concerned about nor too dismissive of the welfare of the natives of the lands you are sent to fight in? Actually, We'd prefer you not say anything about them one way or the other, except that you’re proud to be able to help.

5) If comrades die while searching for you, can you guarantee that your life was worth it? Please explain, in detail, the qualities that make your life worth saving, with particular emphasis on how you would justify your own rescue to Sean Hannity, John McCain, Sarah Palin, Bill O’Reilly, Ann Coulter, and/or Rush Limbaugh. You may continue your answer on the back of this sheet if you need to.

6) If a substantial number of people believe you’re a deserter or a traitor, should we bring you back to try you in a court martial, or just take their word for it and leave you behind?

7) Seriously, do you actually want to be rescued or returned home if you are captured? Really, it would be a lot easier if you just answered "No." Then you'd look brave and self-sacrificing, you could be remembered as a hero, and it would save us a lot of trouble. Thanks.
Dear Soldier: We Need Some Information In Case You're Captured
 
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Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Accounts, accounts, accounts ...

Has nothing to with "the accounts" - which you seem to want to really, really focus on - even though that isn't what my comment referenced or was focused on ...
My entire statement was based on those accounts. So it shouldn't be all that shocking that I would be focusing on, you know, the accounts. Why your comments reference something outside of those accounts, and thus outside of my statements, I can only guess.

I'll state it again (sans typo):

The assumption is that having an epiphany of conscience, morals or ethics would necessarily prevent him from abandoning his platoon or his terms of duty ...

Without hearing Bergdahl's explanation for his actions (or what happened - which likely isn't fully known at this point) - and the reasoning behind it - one is limited in properly evaluating the matter.
Well, duh! That's why my comments were based solely on, you know, "from accounts thus far." My conclusions that it "looks like he attempted exactly what he said he would, just walk off up into the mountains" are logical and valid based on, you know, the accounts thus far. It's certainly not a conclusion drawn using either imagined data or by dismissing real data. It's not likely the final conclusion, but it's the best I can come up with, you know, thus far, based on the information I have.

That is the assumption.
The assumption is there are as-yet unreported contradictory accounts. I'm not making that assumption. You are. I will certainly take into account any additional information that may come out and modify my conclusions accordingly.

I do have them myself on occasion ... as you'll see below.

Should have been "or" ... got me too ... my bad.

Glad we cleared that up.
Yep. It's not a problem, I simply couldn't make sense of the sentence with the typo.

Yup ... but there is that little matter of the Taliban intercept that Wikileaks published - which indicated that Bergdahl was captured in an attack while taking a dump on the crapper.

True or accurate ?

Who knows ?

But it is another piece of data that needs to be properly evaluated - and then kept or discarded, after being either falsified or found to be true.
Absolutely it needs to be evaluated. The statement of, "which indicated that Bergdahl was captured in an attack while taking a dump on the crapper," in an unqualified statement that may or may not be true. "Which possibly indicated..." would at least be more accurate. We're not even sure if the intercepted transmission is talking about Bergdahl. We don't know if he was actually sitting on a physical crapper. He likely wasn't unless he was right in the secured area of the camp.

Moreover, it appears - based on Hastings reporting - that the unit Bergdahl was in was composed of a bunch of undisciplined, recalcitrant screw ups ...

And that goes directly to their professionalism and character (or lack thereof) ... and possibly their veracity ...
Yes it does, but now we're back to making assumptions about whether the accounts are true or not, and then attempting to draw conclusions based on something other than the reported accounts of his disappearance. Those are assumptions that I'm not willing to make in drawing my conclusions, because to do so would be flawed logic. At this point, however, the credibility of those on the ground who served with Bergdahl are certainly more credible than is the USG or the military.

Actually there is - and it's contained in Bergdahl's emails to his father.

If one is willing to grant credence to what Bergdahl's fellow soldiers are saying, then one must at least be willing to consider granting Bergdahl's own words similar credence - until it can be shown that he isn't credible.
The e-mails don't show he was lied to in order to get a commitment out of him when he enlisted. His e-mails show that his romantic vision of what soldiering is, was quickly disillusioned by the reality, and he had second thoughts about his commitment. They show he became bitter and resentful because the reality was different than his naivety led him to believe.

We see that all the time with new expediters, who come into thinking things will be or should be this way, but when they find out it's that way, they lash out and get mad at their carriers and everyone else.

You have absolutely no way to know whether Bergdahl considered it to be conditional ... without hearing from Bergdahl himself.
He went to the Army and enlisted, on his own. And he did so after being turned down by the French Foreign Legion. It's clear that he wanted to be a soldier, and he wasn't all that particular about the particulars.

I would argue that based on what we know of his statements (and possibly his actions) thus far, it appears that he may well have considered it to be conditional.
Conditional upon what?

The commitment he made is contained in the oath.

All maudlin musings aside, the oath itself contains nothing whatsoever about his "fellow soldiers" or his "unit" (save for the reference to obey those officers appointed over him and to follow the UCMJ) or his "country" (save for the reference to support and defend the Constitution)
Seriously? That's like saying there's nothing orange about an orange (save the orange color). The Army Field Manuals, FM-1 and FM-3 in particular, which are part of the orders given by the officers above him and of the UCMJ, lay out exactly what is expected of someone in relation to his unit and his fellow soldiers.

Well, I'd say: Tell it to Pat Tillman ... but unfortunately we can't ...
Was Pat Tillman a deserter? Or is bringing up his case a red herring that has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with Bergdahl's actions?
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
My entire statement was based on those accounts.
Complete BS ...

To some degree your statement - at least the portion that is at issue - is based on your own personal values, and what you consider to "right" and "wrong" ...

It's a value judgement, and you can say that those accounts informed your opinion, but nonetheless it's a value judgement ... which rests on your assumptions of what is (morally, ethically, or in terms of 'conscience') "right" and what is "wrong" ...
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Allen West, the gift that just keeps on giving ... lol ...

Republicans quick to jump on train to crazytown


  • BY PAUL WALDMAN

  • June 3 at 12:23 pm

This morning, former Republican Congressman and current Tea Party celebrity Allen West said: "the U.S. House of Representatives should file articles of impeachment against Barack Hussein Obama."

The occasion in this case was the deal to obtain the release of Bowe Bergdahl, who had been held by the Taliban for five years, which you can add to the half-dozen or so other controversies that have led to conservatives advocating impeachment. Sure, West is a particularly nutty individual, but his call was just a bit more extreme than what lots of Republicans are saying today.

This illustrates one of their central political problems: even when they have a reasonable complaint about a decision President Obama has made, Republicans are so quick to jump on the train to Crazytown that they undermine their own legitimate arguments — among everyone other than the folks who already agree with them.

Yesterday, I looked at the four arguments Republicans are making about why the Bergdahl deal was a bad idea, among them the claim that he may have been a deserter; the size of the price in the form of five Taliban prisoners; and the failure to comply with the law requiring early notification of a Gitmo release. You may find some of these more persuasive than others, but on each count there's a reasonable case to be made. Yet many Republicans find themselves unable to make the reasonable case, instead running immediately to unreasonable ones.

Take, for instance, the argument that the price was too high. Republicans are justifying this by claiming the five Taliban members are so threatening that we will be almost powerless to stop them from laying waste to Americans around the globe. "We gave the Taliban their starting team back!" said Rep. Jason Chaffetz. Sen. Lindsey Graham called them the "Taliban Dream Team." John McCain said: "these are really the toughest of the tough."

These five are certainly horrible people, but they don't have super-powers. If you wanted to make a truly persuasive case that the price the U.S. paid for Bergdahl was too high, you could make it without exaggerating the threat posed by these five individuals. You'd have to do it with an understanding of what the actual threats to the United States are, and not the juvenile premise that foreign threats can be measured by whether some guy can hold his hand over a candle for a long time.

To repeat, there are serious questions about the Bergdahl deal, particularly on the matter of whether the administration violated the law by failing to give Congress the 30-day notice (the administration claims that in urgent circumstances the requirement can be waived, but whether that's true at all, and whether it applies in this case, are both in question). But the Republicans will never win that debate if one of the first things out of their mouths is "Impeach!" These days, they seem incapable of arguing in terms that anyone who isn't already a Republican can accept. And that's the essence of persuasion.
Original article (with video):

Republicans quick to jump on train to crazytown
 

JohnWC

Veteran Expediter
I don't care what yall think I think this is a nother slap in the face of every man and woman who has served and for those of us who were drafted or joined up because we knew the draft was right on our backside and for all those who have died serving
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
More crazy right-wing Bergdahl goodness from Gateway Pundit's resident idiot, Jim Hoft.

THIS WHOLE BLOG CAN BE SHIPPED TO AFGHANISTAN NO ONE HAS LOST ANY
5:09 PM JUNE 4, 2014

FIGURES: STUPIDEST MAN ON INTERNET DISGUSTED THAT OBAMA WOULD ABANDON BERGDAHL, RESCUE BERGDAHL


by DOKTOR ZOOM

Hoft-Bergdahl.jpg

Hats off to Josh Marshall (and his tipster, "TT") at Talking Points Memo for this one: Back in October, Stupidest Man on the Internet Jim Hoft was shocked and horrified at the prospect that Barack Obama might abandon POW Bowe Bergdahl at the end of the Afghanistan War. And now that Bergdahl has been brought home, Stupidest Man on the Internet Jim Hoft is shocked and horrified to learn that Bergdahl was promoted while he was in captivity — or while he was definitely teaching the Taliban how to make bombs.

And Hoft's flying ragemonkeys are fairly predictable, too:

In September 2013:


  • The dictator has changed the military motto from 'no man left behind' to 'anyone we don’t want to be bothered with left behind.' Good job—
  • Of course he is going to leave him, Obamanation has shown that he has no care at all for the military.
  • The fact I can't say what I think is proof of where we are today. We have a muslim dictator. Is there EVER going to be a time we even ATTEMPT to water the tree of liberty?

In June 2014:


  • OK, give him the promotion, then promptly hang him, and his parents.
  • The person assuming the position of POTUS is, in fact, the enemy.
  • You guys have this all wrong. The 5 prisoner swap was a reward for holding Sargent Abdullah for five years. They would have gone for 6, but were advised the midterm elections might "reduce Barry’s flexibility" to cut the deal later. It was the best deal they could get. You have to feel for the Taliban; they had no choice but to deal now.

Our favorite Hoft commenter has to be "Patty," who wrote in October 2013:

He left the FOUR IN BENGAZI to die, so what is one more human life to Obama?

And then today, "Patty" writes about Bergdahl (on another post):

He doesn't look sick. He looks like he belongs there. He is a traitor to his Country and America and our military sit in amazement and those who died because of Bergdahl deserve medals for saving their unites [sic] life.

Patty also calls Bergdahl a "maggot." She (?) seems nice.

Finally, you should know that JIM HOFT IS NO HYPOCRITE: He explains quite clearly that there is absolutely no contradiction between what he was saying in September and what he’s been saying since Bergdahl was returned:

Umm, Josh, I never proposed swapping Bergdahl for FIVE TOP TALIBAN KILLERS!


Not once. No logical thinker would support such a lopsided and dangerous trade.

You need to use better arguments in your next hit piece.

Good luck.

Top killers who should never have been released, eh? Former State Department legal advisor (under G.W. Bush) John B. Bellinger says that while they definitely were not nice guys, they also were likely to be released fairly soon anyway, because international law works that way:

I do not agree, as some Republicans are already arguing, that these individuals should not have been released. In my view, the U.S. would not be able to hold them forever. Indeed, it is likely that the U.S. would be required, as a matter of international law, to release them shortly after the end of 2014, when U.S. combat operations cease in Afghanistan. The Administration appears to have reached a defensible, hold-your-nose compromise by arranging, in exchange for the release of Sergeant Bergdahl, for the individuals to be held in Qatar for a year before they return to Afghanistan.

But what does a radical leftist liberal communist from the Bush Administration know?

To sum up, the real idiot here is anyone who thinks that there's any logical contradiction between condemning Barack Obama for leaving Bowe Bergdahl to rot and condemning Barack Obama for bringing Bowe Bergdahl home, because prisoners who'd have been released anyway were released, and that's TERRIBLE.

[Gateway Pundit and Gateway Pundit via TPM / Lawfare]

Full disclosure: layout of screenshots from Gateway Pundit has been changed to fit our page; no content has been altered. Click image to embiggen.
Figures: Stupidest Man On Internet Disgusted That Obama Would Abandon Bergdahl, Rescue Bergdahl

File under "Thanks for clearing that up Jim" ...
 
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Pilgrim

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I don't care what yall think I think this is another slap in the face of every man and woman who has served and for those of us who were drafted or joined up because we knew the draft was right on our backside and for all those who have died serving
This whole exchange deal was supposed to be about nothing but enhancing Obama's political interests - a venue for him to "spike the football" bringing home the last "POW" at the end of the Afghanistan war and compare himself to wartime presidents who concluded their efforts in a victorious manner after the unconditional surrender of their enemies. Of course there has been no cessation of hostilities by our enemy. He and his administration once again make fools of themselves in front of America's allies and prove their weakness to our adversaries; and to top it off, it was done in an illegal and unconstitutional manner without congressional approval. As usual, Barack Hussein Obama comes across looking like the fool he is and the mainstream media doesn't care.
 
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