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US Army hearing officer recommends no jail for Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl

US military officer says accused deserter US Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl should be sent to a military prison.

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The US military officer who headed a hearing in the case of accused deserter Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl recommended that the man held captive by the Taliban in Afghanistan should not be sent to a military prison, Bergdahl's lawyers said.

In a memorandum issued on Friday, Lieutenant Colonel Mark Visger, the presiding officer at the so-called Article 32 hearing in September in San Antonio, recommended "non-judicial punishment" for Bergdahl, the lawyers said. Military officials were not immediately available for comment.

US military prosecutors told the two-day hearing in September that Bergdahl had intended to desert his post. They said his actions fundamentally altered American operations in Afghanistan and called for him to be held accountable. Bergdahl, 29, was charged earlier in 2015 with desertion and misbehaviour before the enemy. He faces up to life in prison if convicted of the more serious offense of misbehaviour.

Visger's recommendations of a punishment under Article 15, without a punitive discharge, have not been publicly released, lawyers for Bergdahl said. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 15 punishments include reduction of one grade in rank or a requirement that the soldier perform additional duties. Visger will recommend the course of action for resolving Bergdahl's case, such as whether it should proceed to a court-martial or be handled in some other manner. The final decision will be made by the Commanding General of the US Army Forces Command at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

Major General Kenneth Dahl, who led the military's investigation into Bergdahl's disappearance and capture, told September's hearing Bergdahl should not be imprisoned, saying he was not a Taliban sympathiser. Dahl characterised Bergdahl as an unrealistically idealistic soldier who left his post to report concerns about his unit's leadership to a general at another base. He added that none of the soldiers sent to look for Bergdahl had been killed.

Bergdahl disappeared on June 30, 2009, from Combat Outpost Mest-Lalak in Paktika Province, Afghanistan, and was captured by the Taliban, where he suffered years of abuse and torture. He was freed five years later in a prisoner swap that sent five Taliban leaders who were being held at Guantanamo to Qatar.

Read: US Army's Bergdahl suffered some of the worst abuse of any American POW

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