Trump’s earlier statements were used by Bergdahl’s defense to argue that the case should be dismissed. Military judge Jeffery Nance rejected the request, maintaining he had not been influenced by the comments of the man who became commander in chief but that he would consider Trump’s statements “as mitigation evidence” (paywall) in sentencing.
Bowe Bergdahl, the US Army sergeant who last month pleaded guilty to misbehavior before the enemy and desertion, has received a surprisingly light sentence from a military judge: dishonorable discharge.
He had been facing life in prison for abandoning his Afghanistan outpost in 2009, a sentence Donald Trump had famously claimed would be too light. Then-candidate Trump effectively called for Bergdahl’s execution at a campaign rally in July 2016: “Remember the old days, the deserter, what happened?” he asked a New Hampshire crowd. Trump then proceeded to point and mime firing a weapon with his both hands, adding, “bing, bong. When we were strong.” At other campaign stops, he repeatedly called Bergdahl a “dirty rotten traitor” who “should have been executed” and suggested he be shot or thrown from a plane.
Today (Nov. 3), Trump immediately denounced the military court’s sentence: