A new commander-in-chief will be in charge when Army Sgt Bowe Bergdahl is court-martialed in February.
The new trial date set by a military judge today could give the proceedings a higher profile, coming only weeks after the new president probably either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump is sworn into office.
The likely Democratic nominee is already being criticised by Trump supporters for supporting the Taliban prisoner swap that brought Bergdahl home after five years in captivity.
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The concern is that a President Trump could influence Army brass to exert "undue command influence" on the trial, Rachel VanLandingham, a former Air Force lawyer who teaches at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles.
Lawyers will have to try to figure out whether the Army judge or jury deciding Bergdahl's fate have taken Trump's harsh comments to heart, said Eric Carpenter, a former Army helicopter pilot and lawyer who now teaches at Florida International University College of Law in Miami.
"If Trump is elected, it doesn't matter that he made the statements before becoming the commander-in-chief," Carpenter said. "The key is that the panel is free from members who have been influenced by Trump's statements."
"The military judge would allow the defense team to question the jurors, find the ones that have been influenced, and then remove them from the panel," he added.
Bergdahl also could choose to be tried by a judge alone. The soldier from Hailey, Idaho, now 30, faces charges of desertion and misbehavior before the enemy. The latter charge is relatively rare and carries the potential of life in prison.
Bergdahl said he was trying to alert superior officers to problems in his unit when he walked away from his combat outpost in Afghanistan in 2009. He was swiftly captured by the Taliban, and remained a prisoner until President Barack Obama exchanged five Guantanamo Bay detainees for his safe return two years ago.
Obama said the US "does not ever leave our men and women in uniform behind," but the swap was harshly criticized. Some members of Congress said it jeopardized national security.
Clinton was no longer secretary of state by then, but she has defended the deal as a hard but noble decision to retrieve a US soldier who might otherwise have died in captivity.
Bergdahl sat attentively today in his dress blue formal uniform, his infantry cord looped under the epaulet on his right shoulder, during the brief hearing.
The judge, Col Jeffrey Nance, delayed the trial date from August to resolve any disputes over classified documents.