The United States has not given up trying to win the release of an American soldier captured by the Taliban more than four years ago, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said today.
At a ceremony honoring US prisoners of war and soldiers missing in action, the Pentagon chief reaffirmed the military's vow "to never leave a fellow service member behind."
"That commitment extends to Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, who was captured by enemy forces in Afghanistan more than four years ago," Hagel said in a speech.
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Bergdahl disappeared in June 2009 from a base in Paktika province and the Taliban later said they had captured him.
The sergeant remains the only US soldier known to be held by the Islamist militants, who have released several videos of him indicating he was alive.
At one point, US officials discussed a possible deal in which Bergdahl would have been freed in exchange for the release of five Taliban detainees at the Guantanamo Bay prison. But the negotiations collapsed last year.
Hagel said the Department of Defense (DoD) would continue to work to recover remains of more than 80,000 fallen troops who are listed as missing in action from previous conflicts.
"Every day, hundreds of DoD personnel, including forensic anthropologists, underwater archeologists, and many other experts, continue to scour the globe and work in laboratories to identify the missing," he said.
In the past year, the Pentagon has managed to identify 61 troops who had been missing from World War II, Korea and Vietnam, he said.
And today, World War II pilots were buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full honors after their remains were recovered in the mountains of Papua New Guinea, he said.