The Taliban has called it a victory. Exchanging Sgt. Bowe
Bergdahl for five imprisoned Taliban leaders must feel like a great deal for
them.
Since the Obama administration believes that exiting wars is
an achievement, and since it does not care if its exit looks like surrender, the
Taliban might have a point.
All indications suggest that the Obama strategy for the war
on Islamic terrorism is appeasement. The administration does not say so, but
actions sometimes speak louder than words.
For America, it is a bad deal. For the first time America
has negotiated for a hostage. The act projects weakness and sets a very bad
example.
The Wall Street Journal writes:
The
Obama Administration swapped five of the hardest cases at Guantanamo in a
fashion that will encourage terrorists to kidnap more Americans to win the
release of more prisoners.
From there the story gets worse.
By most accounts Sgt. Bergdahl was not a hero captured in
the line of duty. Many of his fellow soldiers consider him to have been a
deserter. They are especially galled at the fact that six of his fellow
soldiers died trying to recover him.
The New York Post reports one of Bergdahl’s last emails to
his father. It does not express love of country, pride in country or belief in
the mission. Bergdahl’s words are chilling:
Bowe
Bergdahl would detail his disillusionment with the Afghanistan campaign in an
e-mail to his parents three days before he went missing.
“I am
sorry for everything here,” he wrote. “These people need help, yet what they
get is the most conceited country in the world telling them that they are
nothing and that they are stupid.”
Bergdahl
also complained about fellow soldiers. The battalion commander was a “conceited
old fool,” he said, and the only “decent” sergeants, planning to leave the
platoon “as soon as they can,” told the privates — Bergdahl then among them —
“to do the same.”
“I am
ashamed to be an American. And the title of US soldier is just the lie of
fools,” he concluded. “I am sorry for everything. The horror that is America is
disgusting.”
Bob
Bergdahl responded in an e-mail: “OBEY YOUR CONSCIENCE!”
As for Bergdahls’ capture, his fellow soldiers have their own
view of the situation.
According to Jake Tapper at CNN:
Former
Pfc. Jose Baggett, 27, of Chicago, was also in Blackfoot Company, and said he
was close to two men "killed because of his (Bergdahl's) actions."
"He
walked off," Baggett told CNN. "He left his guard post. 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."
It would have been dubious to trade any Taliban commanders
for an American hostage. But, trading them for a man that many of his fellow
soldiers considered to be a traitor or a deserter goes beyond the pale. It
undermines morale.
Of course, if Bergdahl had been a loyal and patriotic
American, if he had been proud of his country and had believed in his mission…
he likely would not have walked off into the night, would not have been kept
alive for years by the Taliban and would not have been seen as a hero by the Obama
administration.
1 comment:
An interesting distinction has been raised as to whether he was a hostage or a prisoner....
http://hotair.com/archives/2014/06/02/jay-carney-on-bergdahl-he-wasnt-a-hostage-he-was-a-prisoner/
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