The popular podcast “Serial” launched its second season Thursday, shining a spotlight on the mysterious disappearance of U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl — and allowing him to be heard publicly for the first time since he was freed by the Taliban in May 2014.
Bergdahl’s dramatic rescue in eastern Afghanistan came nearly five years after he deserted his post and was captured, military officials said. Getting him back was part of a complex exchange that involved five Taliban prisoners who were being held at Guantanamo Bay — a move that drew sharp criticism from GOP lawmakers.
Eugene Fidell, Bergdahl’s attorney, told NBC News that the podcast will help explain Bergdahl’s motives for leaving his post.
“We’ve been anxious for the American people to know the facts and circumstances,” Fidell said. “The more the people know, the better.”
Recounting walking away from his military base in June 2009, Bergdahl says in the premiere episode of “Serial’s” second season, “I’m going, ‘Good grief, I’m in over my head.’”
“Suddenly, it really starts to sink in that I really did something bad,” Bergdahl says in the premiere episode of “Serial’s” second season, recounting how he walked away from his military base in June 2009. “Or, not bad, but I really did something serious.”
Bergdahl’s vanishing made him the only U.S. service member ever to be held captive by enemy forces in Afghanistan.
As Bergdahl, 29, faces a court-martial and even a life sentence in prison for leaving his base, House Republicans are claiming in a new report that the Obama administration misled Congress about the effort to release the five Gitmo detainees.
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Republicans on the House Armed Services Committee released a 98-page report Wednesday on its inquiry into the case of the so-called Taliban Five after lawmakers expressed outrage that the Obama administration did not give Congress a 30-day notice about transferring the detainees to Qatar, as required by law.
The report also provided behind-the-scenes details about the Defense Department’s work with the Qataris, who played the middleman in negotiating the swap with the Taliban.
Erik Ortiz
Jim Miklaszewski









