By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 10, 2014 – Bowe Bergdahl continues to
recover and work through the reintegration process at Landstuhl Regional
Hospital in Germany, a day before Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel briefs members
of Congress on how the Army sergeant came to be freed.
Bergdahl’s health continues to improve, and “he is engaging
with hospital staff more and more each day,” Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear
Adm. John Kirby said during a Pentagon news conference today.
The sergeant’s recovery remains the top priority, and it is
going to take time, the admiral said. “Nobody is going to push it any further
or any faster than Sergeant Bergdahl and his caregivers are willing to take
it,” he added.
Bergdahl was held captive for nearly five years in harsh
conditions, Kirby noted. “He’s going to need time to re-assimilate -- time to
heal mentally and physically,” he said.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel will testify before the House
Armed Services Committee tomorrow on Bergdahl's May 31 release, made in
exchange for handing over five members of the Taliban being held at Guantanamo
Bay to the government in Qatar. Today, senior Pentagon officials briefed
senators in a classified session about Bergdahl’s release.
In answering questions today about why members of Congress
were not told in advance about the swap, Kirby reiterated that there was a
small, fleeting window to retrieve the sergeant. “It's safe to say that the …
entire national security team agreed that we needed to take advantage of this
fleeting opportunity,” he said.
Kirby told reporters it was a military obligation to recover
Bergdahl, and he urged them not to rush to judgment on the still unknown
circumstances that might have led to his capture. “There’s really only one
person who knows what happened that night and specifically what led to his
disappearance, and that’s Sergeant Bergdahl.”
At this point in his recovery, the sergeant is not being
questioned about his disappearance five years ago. “He’s got his hands full
right now,” Kirby said.
Once that is finished, the Army will get to the facts and
“if there is some misconduct that needs to be addressed, then the Army will
address that,” Kirby said.
“This young soldier is innocent until proven guilty. “He has
not been charged with anything and was never declared a deserter by the Army.”
No comments:
Post a Comment