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Bergdahl to face charges.

Hopefully hey drag this out until Obama us out of office. That way there is not chance of a pardon
 
Still can't believe what the administration gave up in order to get someone back, who by all accounts, was thought to have done exactly what he's facing a court-martial for. It's even more mind-boggling that the administration didn't anticipate the backlash.
 
Still can't believe what the administration gave up in order to get someone back, who by all accounts, was thought to have done exactly what he's facing a court-martial for. It's even more mind-boggling that the administration didn't anticipate the backlash.
I don't think the admin cared one way or the other
 
Can't believe they paraded this guy's parents around like he was some kind of hero.I think Obama did it as a slap in the face and tried to force the military's hand with this traitor.
 
I don't think the admin cared one way or the other
Obama's been promising to close Gitmo for damn near a decade. This debacle shined a spotlight on the administration's ridiculous foreign policy & gave their detractors legit fuel - they definitely cared when the backlash hit. Remember, they sent Susan Rice out there to push the narrative that he served with, "honor & distinction" to try & spin this dumpster fire.
 
Gen. Robert Abrams, the commander of U.S. Army Forces Command, ordered the court-martial on Monday, breaking with the U.S. military officer overseeing Bergdahl's preliminary hearing who recommended that Bergdahl be referred to a special court-martial and face no jail time.

Lt. Col. Mark Visger, the Army investigator who led the preliminary hearing into the charges Bergdahl faces, recommended against Bergdahl facing any jail time in October.

And Maj. Gen. Kenneth Dahl, who led the investigation into Bergdahl's actions in Afghanistan, testified in September that jail time would be "inappropriate" and said he did not find "any evidence to corroborate the reporting that Bergdahl was ... sympathetic to the Taliban."

So my question is .....why is Gen. Abrams disagreeing with the others?
 
Gen. Robert Abrams, the commander of U.S. Army Forces Command, ordered the court-martial on Monday, breaking with the U.S. military officer overseeing Bergdahl's preliminary hearing who recommended that Bergdahl be referred to a special court-martial and face no jail time.

Lt. Col. Mark Visger, the Army investigator who led the preliminary hearing into the charges Bergdahl faces, recommended against Bergdahl facing any jail time in October.

And Maj. Gen. Kenneth Dahl, who led the investigation into Bergdahl's actions in Afghanistan, testified in September that jail time would be "inappropriate" and said he did not find "any evidence to corroborate the reporting that Bergdahl was ... sympathetic to the Taliban."

So my question is .....why is Gen. Abrams disagreeing with the others?

Because Gen Abrams believes in Duty, Honor, and Country. I believe he should be commended for doing this. He is high up enough to make the decision and has done so with honor, not politics..

My first general order, I will guard everything within the limits of my post and only quit my post when properly relieved. Every American Soldier is taught this from day one. Berghdal broke that general order and really is lucky they are not putting him to death by firing squad. He deserves it.

This piece of crap traitor, Bergdahl, caused several soldiers to loose their lives looking for him. I will post their information below so you can look at these young men and think about why the General is moving forward with a court martial.

You sit here and tell me and these soldiers parents, why they should leave Berghdal alone. He put countless others at risk as they were trying to find him. Many, that you don't even read about.
 
Staff Sergeant Clayton Bowen, 29, of San Antonio, Texas, and Private 1st Class Morris Walker, 23, of Chapel Hill, N.C., were killed by a roadside bomb in Paktika province on Aug. 18, 2009, while trying to find Bergdahl. Like Bergdahl, they were part of the 4th BCT from Fort Richardson, Alaska.

Bowen’s mother last heard from her son the night before he died. “Clay called me around midnight to tell me I

wouldn’t hear from him for a few days,” she said. She never heard from him again, although she can still hear his voice in the two CDs he recorded with the 82nd Airborne All-American Chorus. “He was the only bass in the group,” she said, “so you could always hear him.”

“What I think of first when I think of Morris is his smile because he was always smiling,” his junior-high teacher,

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Wanda Bordone, told the Associated Press after he died. “He had a great sense of humor, lots of friends.”

Staff Sergeant Kurt Curtiss, 27, of Murray, Utah, diedAug. 26 in Paktika Province, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when he was shot while his unit was supporting Afghan security forces during an enemy attack. Like Bergdahl, Bowen and Walker, he was part of the 4th BCT.

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ArmyCurtiss
“I’ll never forget you Kurt,” Adrian Ramirez a fellow soldier from Fort Richardson, posted on a memorial site. “You were my first team leader from the beginning and my squad leader to the end. I will miss you and all the memories I have shared with you.”

2nd Lieutenant Darryn Andrews, 34, of Dallas, Texas,died Sept. 4 in Paktika Province when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device and a rocket-propelled grenade. Like Bergdahl, Bowen, Walker and Curtiss, Andrews was part of the 4th BCT.

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“We grew up with an enormous amount of pride for our nation,” Andrews’ mother, Sondra, told the Amarillo Globe-News. That was understandable: his father. grandfather and uncle had served in uniform. “We passed it on to our children, never thinking we would pay the ultimate sacrifice.”

Staff Sergeant Michael Murphrey, 25, of Snyder, Texas,died Sept. 6 in Paktika province after being wounded by an IED. Like Bergdahl, Bowen, Walker, Curtiss and Andrews, Murphrey was part of the 4th BCT.

“On his 17th birthday his family took him skydiving and after that,” his obituary read, “he decided he wanted to be an Army paratrooper.”

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ArmyMurphrey
On Sept. 4, 2009, Private 1st Class Matthew Martinek, 20, of DeKalb, Ill., was seriously wounded in Paktika province when Taliban forces attacked his vehicle with an improvided explosive device, a rocket-propelled grenade and small-arms fire.

The U.S. military rushed him to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Landstuhl, Germany—the same medical facility where Bergdahl is now being treated.

Bergdahl is expected to fly home to the U.S. soon for additional care and counseling.

Martinek never got that chance. He died a week after the attack—on Sept. 11.

Martinek “tried not to talk too much about what he was doing, but he said he liked helping people,” his brother, Travis Wright, told the AP.

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ArmyMartinek
Like Bergdahl, Bowen, Walker, Curtiss, Andrews and Murphrey, Martinek was part of the 4th BCT.

The diversion of these men and their units to the hunt for Bergdahl thinned the ranks of U.S. troops elsewhere in the region, contributing to several more American KIAs, U.S. soldiers who were there at the time believe.
 
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