"Do not come back to Afghanistan" Taliban Releases Video of Bergdahl Handover

"Do not come back to Afghanistan," militants are depicted telling Bowe Bergdahl. "If you do, next time we will kill you"

A Taliban video that emerged Wednesday shows for the first time the release of captured Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl into American custody after five years in captivity.

The 17-minute video shows Bergdahl, who was released last week in exchange for five Taliban leaders held at Guantanamo Bay, waiting in a pick-up truck in Khost province on the border with Pakistan. Bergdahl is then walked over to a waiting Black Hawk helicopter and handed over to U.S. forces. In a BBC translation of the footage, one of the militants is heard saying: “Do not come back to Afghanistan. If you do, next time we will kill you.”



The video ends with the helicopter flying Bergdahl out of the area. A U.S. military official didn’t deny the video’s authenticity.

“We are aware of the video allegedly released by the Taliban showing the transfer into U.S. hands of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said in a statement. “We have no reason to doubt the video’s authenticity, but we are reviewing it. Regardless, we know the transfer was peaceful and successful, and our focus remains on getting Sgt. Bergdahl the care he needs.”

The narrator of the footage claims 18 Taliban fighters were present armed with rocket propelled grenades and machine guns. Bergdahl was flown to a military hospital in Germany where he is said to be in a stable condition. Bergdahl’s father, who has not yet spoken to his son, said once his treatment is over he will then be flown to an army medical center in Texas.


The prisoner exchange has sparked fierce criticism from Republicans in Congress who note President Barack Obama flouted a legal provision requiring congressional notification of any transfers from Guantanamo. Bergdahl has also come under fire amid reports that he was captured after apparently leaving base and that other soldiers died trying to find him. Some have branded him a “deserter.”


Source : Time , BBC , AP

Comments