Obama Administration Claims that Bergdahl Was Locked in Solitary Confinement For 2 Years Straight – Helps Bergdahl Make Up Best Lies

The Obama administration is trying to claim that Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl was “locked in solitary confinement for two straight years and did not see another human face for that entire time”, as a way to start moving public opinion their way.

Obama Administration Claims that Bergdahl Was Locked in Solitary Confinement For 2 Years Straight - Helps Bergdahl Make Up Best Lies

Obama Administration Claims that Bergdahl Was Locked in Solitary Confinement For 2 Years Straight – Helps Bergdahl Make Up Best Lies

I’m going to have to call BULLSHIT on this Obama administration lie though because we have all read the stories about Bergdahl being basically free while in Afghanistan, and playing soccer with his so-called captors. There are even reports that say Bergdahl was allowed to keep a gun while there.

I 100% don’t believe the Obama administration’s latest lie, but for Obama this is par for the course.

What I do believe is that the Obama administration is currently working with Sgt. Bergdahl to come up with the best lies which help Bergdahl and gets Obama out of hot water.

They initially told the lie that Bergdahl’s health was deteriorating.
Then they changed that and said that Bergdahl was in danger from his “captors”.
Then they said that there was short time to make the decision
Now they say that Bergdahl was being held in solitary confinement for two years.

It is painfully obvious that the criminals in the Obama administration will do anything they want, and then do and say anything that they need to in order to cover up their crimes.

American Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, while held prisoner in Afghanistan, was locked in solitary confinement for two straight years and did not see another human face for that entire time, senior military sources with knowledge of his “reintegration process” told Fox News.

Officials said Bergdahl, during that period, only talked to his captors through the wall of a six-foot-by-six-foot metal box, in which he was kept.

The box was just big enough for him to stand up straight and stretch his arms. If he was ever taken out of the box, Bergdahl was apparently hooded. Bergdahl told officials that this treatment started immediately after he attempted to escape captivity.

“His mental and physical state match this description — and we believe him from what we see,” one official told Fox News.

The details emerged as Bergdahl arrived early Friday at an Army medical center in San Antonio, Texas.

Officials there told a Friday afternoon press conference there is no timeline for Bergdahl’s reintegration, but added that he was in stable condition and that they hope he will “transition to a normal healthy lifestyle.”

Army South Commander Major General Joseph DiSalvo said the reintegration process is to help Bergdahl “with the necessary tools to regain appropriate levels of physical and emotional stability to effectively resume normal activities with minimal physical and emotional complications.”

DiSalvo added that Bergdahl is currently in “stable condition and will work daily with medical and mental health professionals.”

Bergdahl was captured in Afghanistan in June 2009 and released on May 31 in a deal struck by the Obama administration in which five Taliban officials were released from detention.

A Pentagon spokesman, Rear Adm. John Kirby, said Bergdahl arrived at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio on a flight from Ramstein Air Base. The 28-year-old Idaho native was expected to be reunited there with his family.

“Our focus remains on his health and well-being,” Kirby said, adding that Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel is confident that the Army will continue to ensure that Bergdahl receives the care, time and space he needs to reintegrate.

Bergdahl’s family, meanwhile, have asked for continued privacy in a statement released Friday on their behalf by military officials.

“While the Bergdahls are overjoyed that their son has returned to the United States, Mr. and Mrs. Bergdahl don’t intend to make any travel plans public,” the statement reads. “They ask for continued privacy as they concentrate on their son’s reintegration.”

Army psychologist Col. Bradley Poppen said during Friday’s news conference that it’s typically up to the soldier to determine when to reunite with his or her family.

It’s unclear known how long Bergdahl will remain there or if and when he will be questioned about the circumstances behind his apparently voluntary departure from an Army base in Afghanistan in 2009.

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