The Bergdahl Affair Feeds Right into 2016

The feel-good story of freed American prisoner of war Bowe Bergdahl continued to spiral into the latest of a long string of foreign policy messes for the Obama administration – with new reports confirming that Bergdahl, 28, had abandoned his Army post in Afghanistan before being captured.

A former senior military officer told The New York Times that in June 2009 Bergdahl left a note in his tent saying he did not support the mission in Afghanistan, that he was disillusioned with the Army, and that he was leaving to start a new life in the remote border areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan. According to The Times, he left his weapon and body armor behind, bringing just a backpack, notebook, writing materials, knife and water.

Related: Susan Rice Is the Biggest Loser in Bergdahl Affair

Bergdahl was stationed in the Paktika Province along Afghanistan’s border with Pakistan, one of the most violent theaters in the entire war. His decision to leave unarmed - a huge error in judgment - almost ensured his capture.

This curious choice comes from a man with a unique upbringing. Bergdahl, raised in rural Idaho, was homeschooled and had interests from ballet to foreign languages to sailing. His father, Robert, grew a bushy beard popular with the Taliban in an effort to show kinship with the group. The elder Bergdahl said he was planning to go to Afghanistan to try to free his son if the government didn’t act.

Anger from Both Sides
The controversy also gained traction politically, with Republican strategists setting up interviews with soldiers who served alongside Bergdahl. These soldiers were upset that they were hunting for a deserter.

“Yes, I’m angry,” Joshua Cornelison, a former medic in Sergeant Bergdahl’s platoon, told The Times. “Everything that we did in those days was to advance the search for Bergdahl. If we were doing some mission and there was a reliable report that Bergdahl was somewhere, our orders were that we were to quit that mission and follow that report.”

Related: U.S. Army Will Not Look Away from Bergdahl Misconduct: Dempsey

These U.S. soldiers claimed that while the official search for Bergdahl lasted only eight days, they were ordered to follow up on any rumors about his disappearance for three months. It’s unclear whether eight soldiers were killed in the search, but at least two – Pfc. Matthew Martinek and Lt. Darryn Andrews – were killed in an ambush during what soldiers called a mission to find Bergdahl.

DOD officials told The Times it was not clear whether these two soldiers were killed looking for Bergdahl. In a statement, Secretary of the Army John McHugh said that they would speak to Bergdahl about the circumstances of his capture once he is healthy.