It took less than 24 hours for an assault from the right wing to rise after President Barack Obama delivered news of the release of Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl in the Rose Garden on May 31, with many notable Republicans piling on criticisms of the White House and stamping the words “terrorist” and “deserter” on Bergdahl.
Republicans are condemning Obama for what they call a violation of the National Defense Authorization Act that requires the president to notify Congress 30 days before transferring prisoners from Gitmo. Others, flip-flopping their previously stated opinions that favored freedom for the only known prisoner of war in Afghanistan. (Former Republican President Ronald Reagan traded arms with Iran for hostages in the 1980s. And fellow Republican and former President George W. Bush negotiated with Iranians after calling them part of the “Axis of Evil.”)
Forty-three percent of Americans are against the swap that released Bergdahl in exchange for five Gitmo prisoners, according to a new poll released by USA Today and the Pew Research Center among 1,004 adults. Thirty-four percent of the public said it was the “right thing” to do. A majority of Republicans (71%) disapprove of the move – and they’re not afraid to show it.
Here’s what the right has said on Bergdahl’s release since Obama’s announcement:









