U.S. soldier Bowe Bergdahl will reportedly return to active duty, just six weeks after being released from Taliban captivity after five years as a prisoner of war, Defense Department and military officials tell NBC.
After being initially treated in Germany, Bergdahl completed therapy and counseling at an Army hospital in San Antonio and will begin working a desk job at Fort Sam Houston. He’ll be living in the barracks and two soldiers will reportedly help Bergdahl continue his transition into regular life, The New York Times noted.
The final stage of his reintegration is for Bergdahl to become a “regular soldier,” a Defense Department official told NBC. When he’s off-duty, he’ll be allowed to move freely—on and off the base—for the first time since he was traded back into U.S. custody.
Many Republicans have criticized the prisoner trade that freed Bergdahl—he was released on May 31 in a prisoner exchange for five Taliban fighters—because of the circumstances that surrounded Bergdahl’s disappearance and capture. Upon his release, some of Bergdahl’s fellow soldiers alleged that he deserted, leaving his fellow soldiers in danger as they searched for him and an initial, now classified, report found that he’d simply wandered off the base in 2009.
Bergdahl is expected to answer questions for the first time about what happened leading up to his capture by militants in Eastern Afghanistan. While the investigation is underway, the back pay and leave days he would have accrued while in captivity are on hold.









