Senior US Army officials said today that Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl has not yet been interviewed by the two-star general appointed last week to investigate the matter. They said he has not been read his legal rights and has not asked for a lawyer.
But the officials said the military team helping him recover from his imprisonment has told him that he is not immune from any subsequent charges, including anything linked to information he gives them now.
If that happens, the official said the debriefing would be halted and he could be read his rights and given access to a lawyer if he asked for one.
The official said Bergdahl has been cooperative and it appears he has not made any admissions that could be used against him.
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The tenuous legal line is that the reintegration team is focusing on the five years he spent in captivity, not how he got there.
And Army officials said there is no suggestion that Bergdahl was guilty of any misconduct while he was held captive, so there is no reason yet to read him his legal rights.
Some former members of his unit have said that he left of his own accord. Bergdahl has not commented publicly on the circumstances of his disappearance. Several days after he disappeared, it became clear that he had been taken prisoner by insurgents.