Bowe Bergdahl's parents: 'It isn't over'
updated 10:53 PM EDT, Sun June 1, 2014
Source: CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- "You've made it ... You are free," Bowe Bergdahl's mother tells her son
- Afghan Taliban leader praises release of detainees in rare statement
- Susan Rice says U.S. feels confident released prisoners will be monitored
- Bergdahl arrives at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany
"The recovery and
reintegration of Bowe Bergdahl is a work in progress," Bob Bergdahl told
reporters Sunday in Boise, Idaho, just one day after his son was set
free.
"It isn't over for us. In
many ways. It's just beginning for Jani, and I, and our family. There's
a long process here," he said, referring to his wife, Bowe's mother.
Both parents addressed their son, telling him how proud they are of him. They have not yet spoken to him directly.
"There's a reason for
that, and that's because Bowe has been gone so long that it's going to
be very difficult to come back," said Bob Bergdahl.
He compared his son's situation to that of a diver going deep on a dive: "If he comes up too fast, it could kill him."
Bergdahl is hospitalized in Germany, where his mother said there is a team of people in place to assist him.
"Trust them. It's OK, and
give yourself all of the time you need to recover and decompress," Jani
Bergdahl said to her son. "There is no hurry. You have your life ahead
of you."
She continued: "You've made it ... You are free."
Worsening health
Bergdahl, the last
American soldier held captive from the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts,
is on a long journey home after being freed in exchange for five Taliban
detainees who had been held at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba.
Bergdahl's mother reads emotional letter
Bergdahl recovers in Germany hospital
Is negotiating with terrorists inevitable?
Negotiating the release of Bowe Bergdahl
Photos: Americans detained abroad
Photos: Released Guantanamo Taliban detainees arrive in Qatar
Believing that his
health was deteriorating, the United States acted quickly to save his
life after years of work to free him from being a prisoner of war,
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Sunday.
"It was our judgment
that if we could find an opening and move very quickly with that
opening, that we needed to get him out of there essentially to save his
life," Hagel said. "I know President Obama feels very strongly about
that, I do as well."
Bergdahl arrived Sunday morning at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, a U.S. Defense official said.
There was no word on
Bergdahl's condition. He was last seen in a video obtained by the U.S.
military in January and appeared in diminished health.
National Security
Adviser Susan Rice said Sunday that the move to free him came after the
United States learned his health was deteriorating in captivity.
"He had lost ... a good
bit of weight. And we were very concerned that time was not ...
something we could play with, that we needed to act when we had the
opportunity," Rice told CNN's "State of the Union With Candy Crowley."
Bergdahl's father told reporters his son had "passed through all the checkpoints with flying colors."
Hometown celebrates
On Sunday, people in Bergdahl's hometown of Hailey, Idaho, cheered the news and looked forward to the day he might return.
Yellow ribbons were tied on trees in his honor.
"I think as a community
we had our ups and downs, as did the rest of the country. There were
times where we wondered, but Jani and Bob Bergdahl never once gave up
faith that their son was coming home to them," said Stefanie O'Neill, a
family friend.
"They knew. It was never if Bowe comes home -- it was when Bowe comes home," she said.
Five years detained and many questions remain
U.S. special operations
forces recovered Bergdahl without incident early Saturday local time at a
pickup point in eastern Afghanistan, near the border with Pakistan, a
senior Department of Defense official told CNN. American officials said
the government of Qatar brokered the deal.
The 28-year-old Bergdahl
spent five years in the hands of Afghan militants. Questions surround
just how and why he disappeared. In addition to undergoing medical
treatment, he is expected to be debriefed at Landstuhl.
A reporter asked Hagel
Sunday whether Bergdahl had left his post without permission or deserted
-- and, if so, whether he would be punished. The defense secretary
didn't answer directly. "Our first priority is assuring his well-being
and his health and getting him reunited with his family," Hagel said.
"Other circumstances that may develop and questions, those will be dealt
with later."
A senior Defense
official said Bergdahl's "reintegration process" will include "time for
him to tell his story, decompress, and to reconnect with his family
through telephone calls and video conferences."
Bergdahl will likely go
to Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio after he leaves Landstuhl.
It's unclear whether his parents will see him first in Germany or Texas,
a Defense official said.
'He was never forgotten'
Obama, flanked by
Bergdahl's parents at the White House on Saturday, praised the
diplomatic officials and troops who helped secure Bergdahl's release.
"While Bowe was gone, he was never forgotten," the President said.
His father spoke a few
phrases in Pashtun, saying that his son is having trouble speaking
English after his captivity in Afghanistan, according to a military
press service.
"The complicated nature of this recovery will never really be comprehended," his father said.
A senior Defense
official confirmed Bowe Bergdahl is having trouble speaking English but
the reasons for that were not clear, given the trauma he's been through.
'Our only son'
The U.S. government
secured Bergdahl's freedom in exchange for the release to the Taliban of
five of its members detained at Guantanamo Bay.
Bergdahl's parents issued a statement thanking the Emir of Qatar, the U.S. government and the former captive's supporters.
"We were so joyful and
relieved when President Obama called us today to give us the news that
Bowe is finally coming home! We cannot wait to wrap our arms around our
only son."
After Bergdahl was
handed over, a series of secret procedures was set in motion so each
side knew the other was living up to the bargain. Qatari officials were
already at Guantanamo and took custody of the detainees.
A U.S. Air Force
aircraft carrying them left the U.S. Navy base in Cuba on Saturday
afternoon, a senior Defense official told CNN. The United States has
"appropriate assurances" that Qatar will be able to secure the detainees
there, where they are under a travel ban for a year.
The leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Omar, praised the release of the detainees in a rare public statement Sunday.
"Thanks to God that as a
result of the Taliban's sacrifice and the Taliban's political office's
nonstop efforts, five important members of Taliban are released from
Gitmo prison," the statement said.
The operation was so secretive that Afghan President Hamid Karzai was left out of the loop.
"Secretary (of State John) Kerry did inform President Karzai after the fact," Hagel said.
Hagel was asked if this
prisoner exchange could lead to more breakthroughs with the Taliban.
Getting Bergdahl out of captivity was the first concern, he said.
"Whether that could lead
to possible new breakthroughs with the Taliban, I don't know. Hopefully
it might," he said. "But we pursued this effort specifically to get
Sgt. Bergdahl back."
Held by warlord
Bergdahl was deployed to
Afghanistan in May 2009. He was 23 and a private at the time of his
capture, which happened after he finished a guard shift at a combat
outpost on June 30, 2009, in Paktika province.
He was believed to be
held by operatives from the Haqqani network, an insurgent force led by
warlord Siraj Haqqani, who has a reputation for holding positions that
are extreme even by Taliban standards.
The network is
affiliated with the Taliban and al Qaeda, and it was not always clear
whether Haqqani operatives would abide by any agreement among the United
States, Qatar and the Taliban.
An Afghan Taliban
commander not authorized to speak to the media confirmed to CNN that
Bergdahl was captured by insurgents with links to the Haqqani network in
Pakistan. Over the years, the captive was transferred back and forth
between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Critics question the negotiations
The United States has
long declared that it won't negotiate with groups linked to terrorists,
but analysts have said the United States has effectively maneuvered
around the edges of that declaration over the years.
"As the administration
has repeatedly affirmed, we will not transfer any detainee from
Guantanamo unless the threat the detainee may pose to the United States
can be sufficiently mitigated and only when consistent with our humane
treatment policy," a senior administration official told CNN, adding
that the detainees will be "subject to restrictions on their movement
and activities."
Many of the released
Guantanamo detainees held political positions in the Taliban government
that fell in Operation Enduring Freedom in 2001.
But Sen. John McCain, a
former POW, called the released detainees "hardened terrorists who have
the blood of Americans and countless Afghans on their hands." He
demanded to know exactly what steps are being taken to guarantee that
they never fight against the United States again.
Rice told CNN the Qatari government gave Washington assurance that the risk to the United States would be mitigated.
"They enabled us to have
confidence that these prisoners will be carefully watched, that their
ability to move will be constrained," she said.
Other members of Congress have complained about being cut out of the loop.
Rep. Buck McKeon,
chairman of the Armed Services Committee, said he still has not been
briefed by administration officials on the swap.
The California
Republican plans to hold hearings about the Bergdahl exchange, he told
CNN Chief Congressional Correspondent Dana Bash on Sunday.
"We're getting our
information -- other than a very brief notification -- we're getting
most of our information now from the media," he said in an exclusive
interview on "Newsroom."
McKeon said his staff
was notified by the Defense Department Saturday after the exchange took
place, but he pointed to a law that requires the administration to
notify Congress 30 days before detainees are released from the
facilities at Guantanamo Bay.
Rice said Sunday that
the "acute urgency" of Bergdahl's declining health justified the
administration's decision to execute the swap without telling Congress.
"It was determined that
it was necessary and appropriate not to adhere to the 30-day
notification requirement, because it would have potentially meant that
the opportunity to get Sgt. Bergdahl would have been lost," she said.
CNN's Nick Valencia in Hailey, Idaho,
Victoria Eastwood in Germany, Sophia Saifi in Islamabad, journalist
Zahir Shah Sherazi in Peshawar and Ashley Killough, Ray Sanchez, Erin
McPike, Elise Labott, Qadar Sediqqi and Ed Lavandera contributed to this
report.
end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment