Hmm: Did the US Also Pay a Ransom As Part of the Bergdahl Deal?
This is a theory first floated (to my knowledge) by bestselling author Brad Thor, whose piece I linked last week. Now the Washington Free Beacon has tracked down a senior US intelligence official who effectively endorses the idea as not just plausible, but likely -- a conclusion buttressed by his extensive experience dealing with the Haqqani network.
Some context: Prior to his release, Bowe Bergdahl was being held by members of the Haqqani network, a US-designated terrorist organization. Haqqani and the Taliban are not one in the same, with the former group acting as a crime syndicate with a radical Islamist agenda. They're "80 percent Tony Soprano and 20 percent Al Qaeda," is how Thor put it in a telephone conversation last week. According to this official, Haqqani would be more interested in being compensated monetarily than in a prisoner/hostage trade, especially one in which they were not the primary beneficiary.
Recall that of the five jihadi commanders freed in the deal, four were Taliban, and only one was (arguably) primarily Haqqani. Fox News also reported that the US paying a cash ransom for Bergdahl was under discussion as recently as December, so this isn't purely or baselessly speculative:
Lachlan Markay's report also mentions the fact that higher-ranking Haqqanis were not included in the trade, which raises additional questions about how exactly that group benefitted from the swap.
Then there's this: One of Haqqani's top money men and fundraisers was gunned down in Pakistan late last year, which may well have imperiled the group's finances. The likelihood that they're strapped for cash aligns with suggestion that Bergdahl's captors were motivated by money.
In April, the Associated Press reported that Bergdahl's hostage-takers were "anxious to release him." The State Department has declined to say whether there was a cash component to the Bergdahl deal, which should have journalists digging.
The White House should be pressed on this question -- which ought to be phrased broadly enough to incorporate the possibility that any potential remuneration may either have been indirect (i.e., not "officially" paid for from US coffers), or came in a form other than straight cash.
"Did the Bergdahl release pact entail any type of ransom payment, in addition to the release of five Guantanamo detainees?"
If the Obama administration facilitated the release of five high-risk terrorist commanders and some sort of financial remittance, the political firestorm burning in Washington would only grow hotter.
The White House has tried to cast the deal as a traditional prisoner exchange, an assertion contradicted by separate reports and administration claims. If it's revealed that the government also paid a ransom, their operating premise would be officially dead.
But if the radicals who were actually holding bergdahl weren't particularly interested in the detainee side of the trade, why did it happen? There's a working theory among some critics of the deal that Team Obama was most keen on the release aspect, as they'd been looking for an excuse to free these five men sinceearly 2009 -- before Bergdahl abandoned his post. Closing Gitmo -- an Obama ideological obsession -- would require some aggressive detainee repatriation, after all. Allahpundit picks up the thread:
The president told NBC News that the decision to move forward with the Bergdahl exchange was "unanimous" among the "principals" of his administration, adding that he'd "continue to do [these sorts of deals] whenever I have an opportunity."
Not only does he have no apologies, and not only would he do the same thing again -- he's eager to do it again. Good to know. The unanimity he cites, however, was aided by two factors: (1) High-ranking officials who had problems with the plan (Panetta, Hillary, Gates) are no longer in the decision-making loop, and (2)many of the loudest objectors were cut out of the process this time.
One official described Obama's decree as an instance of "forced consensus." Everyone was unanimous because they had to be. Liberal Democrat Dianne Feinstein, meanwhile, continues to be a thorn in the administration's side, as she called into question the White House's latest excuse for bypassing Congress.
My comments: Obama is an Alinskyite, who will use ANY MEANS to accomplish the End he seeks. The US Constitution, Military precedent, Congress, mean NOTHING to him. He is the wisest man alive, din't you know that? He will do as he pleases.
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