The Afghan villagers remember Bergdahl quite well mostly for the reason he was purposely heading into Taliban territory on a mission. While that State Department spokesperson is minimizing the words of the soldiers in Bergdahl’s unit, the State Department cannot ignore the words of the Afghanis.
“It was very confusing to us. Why would he leave the base?” said Jamal, an elder in the village of Yusef Khel, about a half-mile from the American military installation. (Like many Afghans, he goes by only one name). “The people thought it was a covert agenda – maybe he was sent to the village by the U.S.”
Locals remember Bergdahl walking through the village in a haze. They later told Afghan investigators that they had warned the American that he was heading into a dangerous area.
“They tried to tell him not to go there, that it is dangerous. But he kept going over the mountain. The villagers tried to give him water and bread, but he didn’t take it,” said Ibrahim Manikhel, the district’s intelligence chief.
So, let us turn to the home that the Taliban 5 left behind at Gitmo. Air conditioning, video games and recliners, soccer fields, first rate medical care and visitors were all part of the perks that the Gitmo detainees enjoyed. The Taliban 5 left this behind anxious to return to their jihad and Barack Obama aggressively and willingly delivered renewed inspiration and power to the enemy.
Military officials at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility are attempting to make force-feeding a little more fun for detainees. Some longterm hunger strikers can now kick back in a plush recliner — well, not literally, since their ankles are restrained by shackles — and play video games or watch TV while being tube fed a liquid nutritional supplement.
Detainees can choose from hundreds of video games and movies, said Milton, the Guantanamo librarian who doesn’t give out his last name. They can watch Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland or play Portal 2. But, say, Call of Duty: Ghosts isn’t available — Milton said the library doesn’t carry violent video games or movies.
The Taliban specifically asked several years ago for these 5 Gitmo detainees as they were to lead the U.S. paid Taliban headquarters location in Doha. At first even those on the ‘Afghan Good Enough’ team pushed back. The office later closed and now it has a new home in Qatar under the support and approval of al Thani and Barack Obama.
On the Taleban side, it was, significantly, their (officially closed, but apparently still active) political bureau in Qatar that played the key role in negotiations, as the Taleban’s official statement acknowledged. An interview (in Pashto) with office member, Nek Muhammad, highlighted the role of the head of the office, Tayyeb Agha, as chief negotiator in the talks. (1) He said they had originally intended to negotiate directly with the Americans, but then decided it was better to go through Qatar given the complexity of the issues. (This also allowed the White House to say it “doesn’t talk to terrorists.”) One other interesting detail in Nek Muhammad’s interview is his hint that Na’im Kuchi played a role in the handover. Kuchi, a former senior mujahedin and Taleban commander, was detained in Guantanamo, but ‘reconciled’ on his release in 2004 and is now a member of the High Peace Council, although not a particularly active one. Nek Muhammad said Bergdahl had been transferred to the Americans at 6.30 in the evening on Saturday 31 May in the Bati area of Alisher district of Khost province, “near the home of Sardar Na’im Kuchi.” If Kuchi did play a role in the transfer, it looks most likely to have been in his personal capacity and kept secret from the High Peace Council (as news of the deal did not leak).
In one sweeping week under Barack Obama, the American military and the coalition forces of our allies has been dismissed, the blood and treasure spent is regarded with full disdain by the Commander-in-Chief.
While there have been countless scandals during the Obama administration, the Taliban being granted a new ‘win’ in the war on terror by the White House, the real tragedy is Obama’s misplaced loyalty to the Muslim Brotherhood where he clearly loves something else rather than the very America who put him in office only to betray and violate us all.
Andy McCarthy supports the sentiment, Barack Obama crossed over and makes the case on why. No signing statement, where Barack Obama decidedly took excessive power to finesse the law that he signed will or should give him the protection he thinks he built.