Albuquerque Journal

Bergdahl apologizes for searchers’ injuries

Judge to decide on punishment for soldier’s desertion

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

FORT BRAGG, N.C. — In an unexpected and emotional statement, Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl apologized in court Monday to all the military personnel who were wounded while searching for him and described the daily nightmares and flashbacks to his five years in captivity of Taliban allies he still endures.

Bergdahl was the first witness in what’s expected to be a multi-day presentati­on by the defense to the judge who will decide his punishment for endangerin­g comrades by walking off his post in Afghanista­n in 2009. He spoke for two hours, giving a wide-ranging descriptio­n of his brutal years in captivity and what challenges he still faces with daily life.

“I would like everyone who searched for me to know it was never my intention for anyone to be hurt, and I never expected that to happen,” he said, choking up at times. “My words alone can’t take away their pain.”

Bergdahl faces a maximum of life in prison after pleading guilty to desertion and misbehavio­r before the enemy.

His appearance on the witness stand, which the defense hadn’t publicly made known in advance, served as a dramatic counterpoi­nt to several days of emotionall­y wrenching testimony by several service members who were seriously wounded during a massive search effort.

He described the brutal conditions he faced, including beatings with copper wire and unending bouts of gastrointe­stinal problems brought on by squalid conditions.

He was kept in a cage for four out of the five years after several escape attempts, and his muscles atrophied to the point he could barely stand or walk.

Asked by a defense attorney what the worst part of captivity was, he responded that it wasn’t the beatings.

“The worst was the constant, just the constant deteriorat­ion of everything. The constant pain from my body falling apart. The constant screams from my mind,” he said, haltingly. “It was the years of waiting to see whether or not the next time someone opens the door if that would be the person coming to execute you.”

Bergdahl said he still has nightmares that make it hard to sleep more than five hours.

He wakes up sometimes not rememberin­g that he’s back in the U.S., he said, and has daytime flashbacks to captivity arising from unpredicta­ble triggers.

 ??  ?? Sgt.Bowe Bergdahl
Sgt.Bowe Bergdahl

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