Last Updated Jun 4, 2014 7:07 AM EDT
KABUL, Afghanistan -- The Taliban released a video Wednesday showing the handover of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl to U.S. forces in eastern Afghanistan.
The
video posted to the Taliban's primary propaganda website shows
Bergdahl, wearing traditional Afghan clothing, sitting in a pickup truck
parked in a hilly area. More than a dozen armed Taliban fighters stand
around the truck and dot the hillside.
Bergdahl is seen blinking
frequently, which CBS News consultant Jere Van Dyk, who was himself held
by the Taliban for 45 days, said was likely because he'd been held in a
dark place or blindfolded for a long period.
Van Dky said that
from the encounters Bergdahl had with his captors during the handover,
it seemed that he had not become "their friend or close to them."
"The
main captor is lecturing him right up to the end. Bowe is trying to be
friendly -- you always are because you want them to like you, and not
kill you," said Van Dyk.
A Black Hawk helicopter then lands at the site and two Taliban
militants, one carrying a crude white flag tied to the end of a stick
or rifle, lead Bergdahl toward it. They're greeted by three
Western-looking men in civilian clothing to the helicopter, where
soldiers in military uniforms are waiting.
"This is a very
dangerous moment," said Van Dyk. "You don't know if they are going to
kill you and the American soldiers or what. My captors told me they were
sending a suicide bomber to the release."
But the helicopter
quickly takes off, carrying Bergdahl and his rescuers. As it departs, a
message flashes up on the screen in English, reading, "Don' come back to
afghanistan (sic)."
"They told me the same thing," recalled Van Dyk. "'Don't come back to Afghanistan...' that is their message, to him and to us."
The
National Security Council (NSC) told CBS News in a written statement,
"we have no reason to doubt the video's authenticity, but we are
reviewing it."
After five years in captivity,
Bergdahl was freed on Saturday
in a prisoner swap for five Taliban detainees who were being held at
the U.S. military detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Bergdahl, 28, is currently at U.S. military hospital in Germany, where he is undergoing a
battery of mental and physical health checks.
Van Dyk says that as soon as the U.S. military established his
well-being, they would have begun hours of debriefing by intelligence
agents eager to learn anything they can from him about his captors.
The prisoner swap that won his release has
become highly controversial in the United States, with critics saying Bergdahl
may have deserted his unit
before being captured. Others charge the Obama administration broke the
law by failing to notify Congress soon enough about the possible
exchange.
The NCS said in a statement Tuesday that time
constraints made it impossible for the administration to notify
Congress of the swap beforehand, as required by law.
Others worry the administration set a bad precedent by negotiating with a terror group, and gave up too much in the deal.
But the administration has staunchly defended the decision, with
President Obama himself saying Tuesday that his first responsibility was to bring the U.S. service member home.
"Regardless
of the circumstances," said Mr. Obama, "we still get an American
soldier back." He said that was "what every mom and dad who has a son
or daughter sent over to the theater of war should expect."
President
Obama said the decision to move ahead with a negotiated prisoner swap
was made swiftly because "we were concerned about Sgt. Bergdahl's
health."
Mr. Obama said the process to secure the American's
release was "truncated because we wanted to make sure we didn't miss
that window," indicating a deal was on the table but might not have
been for long. He said his administration believed the deal represented
the best and possible last opportunity to get Bergdahl away from his
captors.
Some Republican lawmakers, however, have urged a congressional investigation into the administration's actions.
"There
has not been even the weakest case, in my opinion, made that he was
suffering from a health standpoint, to the degree to which a decision
had to be made immediately," Senate Select Intelligence committee vice
chairman Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), said Tuesday.
The Wall
Street Journal reported Wednesday that a series of secret videos
provided to U.S. intelligence agents by the Taliban between 2011 and
2013 showed his health deteriorating at an "alarming" rate. According to
the report, intelligence officials believed Bergdahl was likely
suffering from at least one of several specific ailments, but what those
ailments were remains unclear.
U.S. military officials have not
said what Bergdahl is being treated for at the U.S. base in Landstuhl,
Germany. They've given no specifics on his condition since he arrived
there.
© 2014 CBS Interactive Inc. All
Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this
report.
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