The Denver Post

Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl finally tells his story of walking away from his base in Afghanista­n, his capture and the political fallout of his return home.

- By Dan Lamothe

After slipping away alone from his tiny base in Afghanista­n under cover of darkness in 2009, Army Pfc. Bowe Bergdahl had a sinking thought: His plan to draw attention to himself by spawning a massive manhunt was going to lead to a “hurricane of wrath” from his commanders.

Bergdahl decided then to deviate from his plan to head straight from his platoon’s base, Observatio­n Post Mest, to the larger headquarte­rs 20 miles away, Forward Operating Base Sharana, he said in an interview published Thursday by the podcast “Serial.” It marked his first interview since he was released in May 2014 after being held in captivity for five years by a group affiliated with the Taliban.

Bergdahl, comparing himself to a fictional action hero, said he decided to collect intelligen­ce and look for the Taliban before turning himself in.

“Doing what I did is me saying that I am like, I dunno, Jason Bourne ... I had this fantastic idea that I was going to prove to the world that I was the real thing,” Bergdahl said. “You know, that I could be what it is that all those guys out there that go to the movies and watch those movies, they all want to be that, but I wanted to prove that I was that.”

But he got lost in some hills and was taken prisoner by enemy fighters on motorcycle­s, he said.

“I don’t know what it was, but there I was in the open desert, and I’m not about to outrun a bunch of motorcycle­s, so I couldn’t do anything against, you know, six or seven guys with AK-47s,” Bergdahl said. “And they pulled up and just. ... That was it.”

Bergdahl’s comments aired in the first episode of a new season of “Serial,” the popular weekly podcast spun off from the public radio show “This American Life.” The show’s host and creator, Sarah Koenig, said in the episode that the new season of “Serial” will draw heavily from 25 hours of recorded phone calls between Bergdahl and Mark Boal, a filmmaker who began interviewi­ng the soldier after he was released.

Back in the spotlight

The “Serial” focus on the case promises to draw even more attention to Bergdahl, who faces military charges of desertion and misbehavio­r before the enemy. It also will offer even more fodder in a case that already was heavily politicize­d, with many Republican­s angry that the Obama administra­tion opted to recover the soldier in a swap in which five Taliban officials were released last year from the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. They remain under supervised release in Qatar.

Bergdahl’s legal status remains in question. Evidence in his case was reviewed by the Army in a two-day September hearing, but the service has been tight-lipped about its plans for him. He faces up to life in prison, although the officer who oversaw the hearing has recommende­d against both the most serious kind of court-martial and prison time, according to Bergdahl’s lawyer, Eugene Fidell.

Fidell declined to comment on the production of the “Serial” podcast or to say how much knowledge he had of its developmen­t, but Koenig said in the podcast that Bergdahl gave her team permission to use the recorded phone calls. Fidell released a statement praising the first episode, and repeating his legal team’s call for the Army to be transparen­t and release documents associated with the case, including from an investigat­ion run by a general officer.

“Right direction”

“We have asked from the beginning that everyone withhold judgment on Sgt. Bergdahl’s case until they know the facts,” the statement said. “The Serial podcast, like the preliminar­y hearing conducted in September, is a step in the right direction. We hope the Army will now do its part to advance public understand­ing by releasing Lt. Gen. Kenneth S. Dahl’s report, including the transcript of his interview of Sgt. Bergdahl.”

The statement continued: “Americans of good will should be afforded an opportunit­y, especially at this time of year, to judge the matter calmly and in its proper light. The contrast between the podcast and the strident, politicall­y-inspired calls for drumhead justice (at best) could not be sharper.”

The 44-minute first episode opens with Koenig describing a Taliban propaganda video of militants handing over Bergdahl in Afghanista­n to U.S. forces. But it is Boal’s conversati­ons with Bergdahl and the soldier’s descriptio­n of his capture and captivity that dominate it.

Bergdahl, now 29 and a sergeant, says in the podcast that he ran away from his base to prompt a “DUSTWUN,” an acronym short for “duty status where abouts unknown.” That matches testimony from Dahl, who said during the hearing in September that Bergdahl had told him in an interview that he wanted to speak to a senior commander to air grievances about his unit.

“What I was seeing from my first unit all the way up into Afghanista­n, all’s I was seeing was basically leadership failure, to the point that the lives of the guys standing next to me were literally, from what I could see, in danger of something seriously going wrong and somebody being killed,” Bergdahl said in the podcast.

The general said in testimony in September that Bergdahl had an inflated sense of his ability as a soldier and drew conclusion­s that puzzled his colleagues. Dahl said that Bergdahl’s childhood living at “the edge of the grid” in Idaho hurt his ability to relate to other people and prompted him to be a harsh judge of character and “unrealisti­cally idealistic.”

“I think he absolutely believed that the things he perceived were absolutely true,” Dahl testified.

Military officials who interviewe­d Bergdahl at length said that he was tortured and kept in solitary while held by the Haqqani network, a group affiliated with the Taliban.

 ?? Provided by Intel Center ?? Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl talks about his experience­s in the podcast “Serial.”
Provided by Intel Center Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl talks about his experience­s in the podcast “Serial.”

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