The Sunday Telegraph

Deserter Bergdahl set to profit from film deal

- By Rob Crilly

in New York MEMBERS of Bowe Bergdahl’s platoon say they are furious that the US soldier escaped prison and will still be able to profit from films or books about how he was captured by the Taliban after abandoning his post in Afghanista­n.

Mark Boal and Kathryn Bigelow, the team behind Zero Dark Thirty, are already working on a film of his story based on 25 hours of interviews with the soldier.

The case has proved politicall­y polarising, with President Donald Trump among those criticisin­g the ruling on Friday by a military judge that Bergdahl should be dishonoura­bly discharged, demoted to private and pay a fine of $1,000 (£765) a month for the next 10 months.

Josh Cornelison, who served as a medic in Bergdahl’s platoon, said it was too light a sentence for putting his comrades in danger.

“It bugs me that this is a guy who willingly walked away, who had people severely injured and [killed through] looking for him or looking for informatio­n about him, and he now has the potential to make a lot of money – whether it’s a book deal, exclusive interview rights, TV, movies, whatever.”

Bergdahl admitted desertion and misbehavio­ur before the enemy and had faced up to life in prison. He said he left his post to walk to another base in order to raise concerns about morale and management in his unit.

However, Mr Cornelison, who now runs an organisati­on in California recording veterans’ experience­s, said that story made no sense.

Mr Cornelison was serving at the small combat outpost in Paktika province, Afghanista­n, from where Bergdahl went missing.

He believes six soldiers died during the manhunt, although the military court hearings would only admit evidence that personnel had been wounded.

The sentence was condemned by Mr Trump, who tweeted: “The decision on Sergeant Bergdahl is a complete and total disgrace to our country and to our military.”

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