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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Bowe Bergdahl's Hometown Gets Cold Feet About Homecoming- BBC



Bowe Bergdahl: Town cancels welcome for freed US soldier

A US Army photograph of Bowe Bergdahl. Sgt Bowe Bergdahl went missing in June 2009 and was the Taliban's only US prisoner of war

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A welcoming party in the home town of a US soldier freed from Afghan captivity has been cancelled, amid suspicions that he deserted his post.

Organisers said the event in Hailey, Idaho, was cancelled for safety reasons, because of a large increase in the number of expected attendees.
 
Bowe Bergdahl was released on Saturday after five years in Taliban captivity.

Several commentators and soldiers have branded him a deserter and called for him to be punished.

The circumstances of Sgt Bergdahl's capture in 2009 remain unclear, although the Pentagon has concluded he left his post in Paktika Province without authorisation.

The town's annual "Bring Bowe Back" rally, calling for Sgt Bergdahl's release, was already scheduled for 28 June, but was changed to a homecoming party after he was freed on Saturday.

But in a statement on Wednesday, the town authorities said organisers expected a dramatic increase in attendance because of national media attention.

"In the interest of public safety, the event will be cancelled", the statement said.

Authorities in the small town of 8,000 people said they had been inundated with messages of protest and complaint.

Jani and Robert Bergdahl (1 June 2014)  
The soldier's parents, Jani and Robert Bergdahl, were due to speak at the homecoming event
 
Signs of support with images of U.S. Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl are displayed outside Zaney"s coffee shop in Hailey, Idaho in this file photo taken May 31  
Residents of Hailey, Idaho, have celebrated the news of Sgt Bergdahl's release
 
The president of Hailey's Chamber of Commerce, Jane Drussel, told the Associated Press that she was saddened the event had to be cancelled.

"It's upsetting because this is where people live in peace and harmony," she said. "The joy has all of a sudden become not so joyful."

Controversial swap
  The release of Sgt Bergdahl in exchange for five senior Taliban figures from Guantanamo Bay has caused controversy in the US.

Critics of the deal have alleged that six US soldiers were killed in the initial efforts to locate the missing man.

The US Army has confirmed it will launch a review into the circumstances surrounding Sgt Bergdahl's capture in June 2009.
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The US military's top-ranking officer, Gen Martin Dempsey, said on Tuesday that the Army would not ignore misconduct but that the 28-year-old was "innocent until proven guilty".

"When he is able to provide the facts, we'll learn what happened," he said.

President Barack Obama defended his decision to go ahead with the prisoner swap, saying America had a "pretty sacred rule" not to leave soldiers behind.

The soldier is currently in a military hospital in Germany undergoing rehabilitation. It is not yet known when he will return to the US.

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