I'm glad he was brought back. The trade doesn't bother me at all, since Homer's point is right: in the end, we're going to end up releasing all of these Taliban guys anyhow. Like it or not (and personally I hate it) we're going to have to come to an accord with the Taliban, in what will inevitably a messy end to a messy war. It's going to be ugly. Hopefully not Vietnam in 1975 ugly (that was the worst ending to a war in our history) but ugly all the same.
But the more I read about this guy, I have to say the more he really bothers me. I'm not gonna go all tommyboy and hope he gets ball cancer, but he doesn't sound like a good dude. (Also, if you read the Rolling Stone article, the troops he served with don't sound too good either- demoralized, not knowing what the hell they're doing there, hating the Afghans and themselves- sounds like Vietnam all over again!) I'd like to see him court-martialed for desertion. He doesn't need to serve any time (he's done that already) but he really should get a dishonorable discharge.
And I have to add, in this instance, the Obama administration looks foolish. They spoke too soon; they obviously didn't realize this guy was a deserter; they called him an honorable soldier. That's crap. And it is reminiscent of the first days after Benghazi. While I have little concern with President Obama's foreign policy (as I've written, I think he's been terrific) there is no question that his public relation team sucks. They keep getting #### wrong, mixing their messages, and sometimes insisting on stuff they know is wrong because they can't acknowledge that they screwed up. Not good. Of course the conservatives will run with this and try to find conspiracy ####; they're certain to go overboard as they always do. But this time Obama and crew really messed up good.