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#1 |
Junior Master Dwellar
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Northern California
Posts: 2,122
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OK, Boss, I will try and find a transcript and get back to you.
I was going by CNN's report that seemed to me to describe the horror and desperation of a search that left the poor long suffering captain's uniform filthy dirty. A platoon out for a month seems pretty silly, especially since there was no food or water resupply in that time that just might have included some socks. I have a hunch that in a close knit platoon the feeling was that that silly goose Bergdahl fucked up again, but we better go look. The brass more likely felt that bring him back dead or alive was the best way to save face and rank. |
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#2 |
I love it when a plan comes together.
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 9,793
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I think chain of command attitudes on the recovery of missing combatants, in theaters of operation, has improved since I was on active duty and your service period precedes mine. Contemporary communications technology and greater transparency makes it more personal for commanders as they're more easily contacted by relatives of missing soldiers. Commanders may be more inclined to do right by the missing soldier's family regardless of how the missing soldier was thought of by peers and superiors. Commanders during our time(s) were more insulated from such outside influences.
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