Friday, 6 June 2014

Obama makes 'no apologies' for Taliban hostage deal


BRUSSELS (AFP) - President Barack Obama vehemently refused to apologise Thursday for doing a prisoner trade with the Taliban to free a US soldier, despite a fierce political storm over the deal in Washington.
Critics, both Republican and Democratic, have asked whether the transfer of five Taliban prisoners from Guantanamo Bay for the release of US Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl was even legal, and question both the price paid and the principle of a swap.
But Obama, asked about the row raging in Washington at the G7 summit in Brussels was unapologetic, repeating that he had a duty as commander-in-chief to get Bergdahl home.
"We have a basic principle, we do not leave anybody wearing the American uniform behind, Obama said, adding that he had acted last week because the health of Bergdahl, held captive for nearly five years was deteriorating.
"We saw an opportunity and we seized it and I make no apologies for that."
Obama referred to the huge controversy on Capitol Hill which has drawn Bergdahl and his family into the political crossfire.
"I'm never surprised by the controversies that are whipped up in Washington," Obama said.
"That's par for the course."
The president also defended his decision to announce Bergdahl's release in a televised appearance in the White House Rose Garden with the soldier's parents at his side.
"This is not a political football -- you had a couple of parents whose kid volunteered to fight in a distant land, who they hadn't seen in five years," Obama said.
"I make absolutely no apologies for making sure that we get back a young man to his parents and that the American people understand this is somebody's child."
Some of the president's critics have warned that Obama, already burdened by a series of crises, has sunk deeper into political quicksand by negotiating with terrorists, keeping Congress in the dark or manufacturing a military success story in order to mask other scandals.
Democratic Party, Senate Intelligence Committee chair Dianne Feinstein, has even accused Obama of breaking US law by failing to provide lawmakers 30 days' notice before transferring prisoners out of Guantanamo.
The White House has offered several explanations for acting without congressional notification to recover Bergdahl.
At first, it argued his health and safety were in immediate jeopardy.
Later, it said a delay would interfere with the president's constitutional function of protecting Americans.
On Thursday, a senior US official embroidered the tale even further, saying that a video showing Bergdahl appearing in poor health in January added extra urgency to the bid to free him.
The official said it was not possible to divulge contents of a classified briefing for senators, but did say they were told that Bergdahl's recovery and his life would be in danger "if the detainee exchange proceedings were disclosed or derailed."
A Senate aide told AFP meanwhile that the government had "obtained credible information that, if anything about the swap became public, Bergdahl would be killed."
Complicating the defense of the swap are the questionable circumstances of Bergdahl's capture, with some soldiers accusing the 28-year-old of desertion and the US military announcing it will investigate whether he should be disciplined.
"It doesn't look good," Senator Joe Manchin winced on Wednesday ahead of a classified briefing for all 100 senators in which officials provided details on the exchange.
 

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