Michael Hastings’ Rolling Stone feature this month about 26-year-old Bowe Bergdahl who was captured by the Taliban when he walked off his Army base in Afghanistan three years ago disillusioned with the war tackles a difficult subject where a twentysomething solider is caught up in a painful tug-of-war.
Hastings deposits in “The Last American Prisoner of War” that Bergdahl’s imprisonment by the Taliban is complicated by internal debate among U.S. officials, including Sen. John McCain, as to whether the country should agree to trade five Taliban prisoners for Bergdahl. Further hurting Bergdahl’s case is the fact that some see him as a deserter. Hastings explains how the Pentagon and the White House have worked to eliminate discussion of Bergdahl in the media for a variety of reasons, including threats to negotiations over his return.
“I think as Americans, whatever the reasons he left, a solider who signed up, who made this sacrifice, it would be a great thing for the country to put efforts behind trying to get this kid home,” Hastings said during msnbc’s NOW with Alex Wagner Friday.
Hastings, a contributing editor to Rolling Stone and BuzzFeed reporter, said one of the reasons he got the story was due to Bergdahl’s parents’ desperation to free their son after three long years.
“Bowe Berghdal’s mother and father, Jani and Bob Berghdal, have spent the last three years in silence,” he told Alex Wagner. “They have been praying every day to bring their kid home, and they were at a point of such desperation because he was still in captivity, that’s why they went to the press, that’s why they talked to me – to try to bring as much attention to their son’s cause as possible.”
Hastings also credits leaks with giving him the insight into a “top-secret, classified briefing” that outlines the internal debate happening among U.S. officials.
The tensions came to a boil in January, when administration officials went to Capitol Hill to brief a handful of senators on the possibility of a prisoner exchange. The meeting, which excluded staffers, took place in a new secure conference room in the Capitol visitor center. According to sources in the briefing, the discussion sparked a sharp exchange between Senators John McCain and John Kerry, both of whom were decorated for their service in Vietnam. McCain, who endured almost six years of captivity as a prisoner of war, threw a fit at the prospect of releasing five Taliban detainees.
Whether the publicity will help Berghdal or not, is a “risk that Bowe’s parents weighed,” Hastings said.
Either way, the emails that Berghdal sent to his parents prior to his capture are heartbreaking and indeed show a soldier who believes he was misled and blames his superior officers for incompentence and callousness.
In his final email before his capture:








