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Saturday, May 31, 2014

Six missing climbers on Washington's Mount Rainier presumed dead - New York Daily News


STAND ALONE PHOTOElaine Thompson/AP The six climbers were reported missing to Mountain Rainier park rangers on Saturday after they never returned from their trip to the summit.

Six Mount Rainier climbers are presumed dead after helicopters detected pings from emergency beacons buried in the snow and a debris field that may indicate an avalanche.


Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Patricia Wold told KOMO-TV on Saturday there’s no way the group could have survived.


The Seattle Times reported rescuers found tents, clothing and debris strewn over hundreds of feet on the mountain’s sheer north side. The newspaper also said searches were suspended.


Park Ranger Fawn Bauer said the six were at 12,800 feet on the 14,410-foot peak at last contact Wednesday.


Searchers reportedly picked up the pings at 9,000 feet. The missing group includes four clients of Seattle-based Alpine Ascents International and two guides.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1nS96ex

Cruz wins straw poll of group that once was wild about Perry - Dallas Morning News


NEW ORLEANS — In an audition of their nascent presidential themes, the two titans of Texas politics performed as top acts of the Republican Leadership Conference on Saturday.


U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. Rick Perry played to 1,500 conservative activists, blasting Washington and laying out their scripts of how to change it.


But on this platform, the younger Cruz upstaged the political veteran, winning the conference’s presidential straw poll and radiating the excitement and promise that Perry had ignited three years before.


“I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is a Ronald Reagan reincarnation that we need to right the course of the nation,” said attendee George Peterson.


The dual performances before the GOP activists come at a time when Cruz has risen as a hero of movement conservatives and Perry has succeeded in repairing some of the damage done by his humiliating performance in the last presidential contest.


Both Texans burnished their strengths before bedrock conservatives, stopping in Louisiana as part of their increasingly national tours.


Perry was fresh from Iowa, the third trip this year to the state with the first presidential contest. In the past three weeks, Perry has been to Florida, New York and Pennsylvania, and last week he met in Austin with a contingent of 13 conservative leaders from New Hampshire.


Cruz was just back from tours of Israel, Poland and Ukraine, where he met foreign leaders and dove into national security issues. Soon after his speech, and before Perry spoke, Cruz jetted to New York to appear as a guest Sunday on This Week on ABC.


In other ways, the two men arrived at the conference from different places.


At the 2011 conference, two months before he announced his campaign for president, Perry gave a fiery speech that was interrupted by chants of “Run, Rick, run.”


Saturday, Perry found himself in a pack of presidential also-rans: Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Rick Santorum. And his speech, instead of trumpeting the righteousness of fiscal and social conservativism, was more about solving the nation’s problems with big ideas.


“Americans are looking for the type of leadership that transcends bipartisanship,” Perry said.


He credited states with engineering answers to health care, jobs and the environment.


“They are sick and tired of the same old Washington food fights that we see too often. That people are scoring political points and they think that’s more important than policy solutions,” Perry said.


In his speech, Cruz placed himself as a happy bull in Washington’s china shop, upsetting the status quo and working to represent tea party conservatism.


“There’s a tradition in the Senate that freshmen should be seen and not heard. I haven’t entirely managed to comply with that,” he joked, referencing a filibuster and his attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act through a government shutdown.


He said he would continue such efforts, drawing his power not from the Senate but from movement conservatives.


Cruz told the crowd that the Reagan revolution “didn’t come from Washington. Washington despised Ronald Reagan. If you have a candidate that Washington adores, run and hide.”


Regardless of their national ambitions, Cruz dismissed talk of any intrastate rivalry between the two.


“I am a big fan of Governor Perry’s,” he said.


“I understand it’s more interesting to write stories about battles between people than common ground. But Rick Perry and I agree on a good many things,” he said.


Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak said Cruz and Perry probably don’t see each other as their main rivals to the presidency.


“They’re both delicately throwing brush-back pitches,” Mackowiak said, but they’re also appealing to different constituents.


Perry is running as a long-time executive who has managed a state with the best economy in the nation. Cruz is firing up the grass roots and leading a conservative movement, Mackowiak said.


The conference is a good testing ground, he said.


“You rarely see these opportunities where presidential candidates compete head-to-head, see what messages they’re testing,” Mackowiak said.


Cruz will still need to show voters he’s ready, with limited experience, to be president, and Perry will need to convince supporters that he won’t falter at important times, he said.


For GOP activists, they have both made headway.


“I really would like to see him run again,” attendee Cheryl Blanke said of Perry after the governor posed in a picture with her.


In the least, she said, “I see him in a cabinet position.”


But the candidate to watch, she said, is Cruz.


“Ted Cruz has that something you can’t teach,” she said. “He just resonates.”


Follow Christy Hoppe on Twitter at @christyhoppe.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1nS98TI

Six missing climbers on Washington's Mount Rainier presumed dead - New York Daily News


STAND ALONE PHOTOElaine Thompson/AP The six climbers were reported missing to Mountain Rainier park rangers on Saturday after they never returned from their trip to the summit.

Six Mount Rainier climbers are presumed dead after helicopters detected pings from emergency beacons buried in the snow and a debris field that may indicate an avalanche.


Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Patricia Wold told KOMO-TV on Saturday there’s no way the group could have survived.


The Seattle Times reported rescuers found tents, clothing and debris strewn over hundreds of feet on the mountain’s sheer north side. The newspaper also said searches were suspended.


Park Ranger Fawn Bauer said the six were at 12,800 feet on the 14,410-foot peak at last contact Wednesday.


Searchers reportedly picked up the pings at 9,000 feet. The missing group includes four clients of Seattle-based Alpine Ascents International and two guides.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1kdNnO6

Cruz wins straw poll of group that once was wild about Perry - Dallas Morning News


NEW ORLEANS — In an audition of their nascent presidential themes, the two titans of Texas politics performed as top acts of the Republican Leadership Conference on Saturday.


U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. Rick Perry played to 1,500 conservative activists, blasting Washington and laying out their scripts of how to change it.


But on this platform, the younger Cruz upstaged the political veteran, winning the conference’s presidential straw poll and radiating the excitement and promise that Perry had ignited three years before.


“I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is a Ronald Reagan reincarnation that we need to right the course of the nation,” said attendee George Peterson.


The dual performances before the GOP activists come at a time when Cruz has risen as a hero of movement conservatives and Perry has succeeded in repairing some of the damage done by his humiliating performance in the last presidential contest.


Both Texans burnished their strengths before bedrock conservatives, stopping in Louisiana as part of their increasingly national tours.


Perry was fresh from Iowa, the third trip this year to the state with the first presidential contest. In the past three weeks, Perry has been to Florida, New York and Pennsylvania, and last week he met in Austin with a contingent of 13 conservative leaders from New Hampshire.


Cruz was just back from tours of Israel, Poland and Ukraine, where he met foreign leaders and dove into national security issues. Soon after his speech, and before Perry spoke, Cruz jetted to New York to appear as a guest Sunday on This Week on ABC.


In other ways, the two men arrived at the conference from different places.


At the 2011 conference, two months before he announced his campaign for president, Perry gave a fiery speech that was interrupted by chants of “Run, Rick, run.”


Saturday, Perry found himself in a pack of presidential also-rans: Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Rick Santorum. And his speech, instead of trumpeting the righteousness of fiscal and social conservativism, was more about solving the nation’s problems with big ideas.


“Americans are looking for the type of leadership that transcends bipartisanship,” Perry said.


He credited states with engineering answers to health care, jobs and the environment.


“They are sick and tired of the same old Washington food fights that we see too often. That people are scoring political points and they think that’s more important than policy solutions,” Perry said.


In his speech, Cruz placed himself as a happy bull in Washington’s china shop, upsetting the status quo and working to represent tea party conservatism.


“There’s a tradition in the Senate that freshmen should be seen and not heard. I haven’t entirely managed to comply with that,” he joked, referencing a filibuster and his attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act through a government shutdown.


He said he would continue such efforts, drawing his power not from the Senate but from movement conservatives.


Cruz told the crowd that the Reagan revolution “didn’t come from Washington. Washington despised Ronald Reagan. If you have a candidate that Washington adores, run and hide.”


Regardless of their national ambitions, Cruz dismissed talk of any intrastate rivalry between the two.


“I am a big fan of Governor Perry’s,” he said.


“I understand it’s more interesting to write stories about battles between people than common ground. But Rick Perry and I agree on a good many things,” he said.


Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak said Cruz and Perry probably don’t see each other as their main rivals to the presidency.


“They’re both delicately throwing brush-back pitches,” Mackowiak said, but they’re also appealing to different constituents.


Perry is running as a long-time executive who has managed a state with the best economy in the nation. Cruz is firing up the grass roots and leading a conservative movement, Mackowiak said.


The conference is a good testing ground, he said.


“You rarely see these opportunities where presidential candidates compete head-to-head, see what messages they’re testing,” Mackowiak said.


Cruz will still need to show voters he’s ready, with limited experience, to be president, and Perry will need to convince supporters that he won’t falter at important times, he said.


For GOP activists, they have both made headway.


“I really would like to see him run again,” attendee Cheryl Blanke said of Perry after the governor posed in a picture with her.


In the least, she said, “I see him in a cabinet position.”


But the candidate to watch, she said, is Cruz.


“Ted Cruz has that something you can’t teach,” she said. “He just resonates.”


Follow Christy Hoppe on Twitter at @christyhoppe.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1kdNl8X

Six missing climbers on Washington's Mount Rainier presumed dead - New York Daily News


STAND ALONE PHOTOElaine Thompson/AP The six climbers were reported missing to Mountain Rainier park rangers on Saturday after they never returned from their trip to the summit.

Six Mount Rainier climbers are presumed dead after helicopters detected pings from emergency beacons buried in the snow and a debris field that may indicate an avalanche.


Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Patricia Wold told KOMO-TV on Saturday there’s no way the group could have survived.


The Seattle Times reported rescuers found tents, clothing and debris strewn over hundreds of feet on the mountain’s sheer north side. The newspaper also said searches were suspended.


Park Ranger Fawn Bauer said the six were at 12,800 feet on the 14,410-foot peak at last contact Wednesday.


Searchers reportedly picked up the pings at 9,000 feet. The missing group includes four clients of Seattle-based Alpine Ascents International and two guides.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1hLFycJ

Cruz wins straw poll of group that once was wild about Perry - Dallas Morning News


NEW ORLEANS — In an audition of their nascent presidential themes, the two titans of Texas politics performed as top acts of the Republican Leadership Conference on Saturday.


U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. Rick Perry played to 1,500 conservative activists, blasting Washington and laying out their scripts of how to change it.


But on this platform, the younger Cruz upstaged the political veteran, winning the conference’s presidential straw poll and radiating the excitement and promise that Perry had ignited three years before.


“I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is a Ronald Reagan reincarnation that we need to right the course of the nation,” said attendee George Peterson.


The dual performances before the GOP activists come at a time when Cruz has risen as a hero of movement conservatives and Perry has succeeded in repairing some of the damage done by his humiliating performance in the last presidential contest.


Both Texans burnished their strengths before bedrock conservatives, stopping in Louisiana as part of their increasingly national tours.


Perry was fresh from Iowa, the third trip this year to the state with the first presidential contest. In the past three weeks, Perry has been to Florida, New York and Pennsylvania, and last week he met in Austin with a contingent of 13 conservative leaders from New Hampshire.


Cruz was just back from tours of Israel, Poland and Ukraine, where he met foreign leaders and dove into national security issues. Soon after his speech, and before Perry spoke, Cruz jetted to New York to appear as a guest Sunday on This Week on ABC.


In other ways, the two men arrived at the conference from different places.


At the 2011 conference, two months before he announced his campaign for president, Perry gave a fiery speech that was interrupted by chants of “Run, Rick, run.”


Saturday, Perry found himself in a pack of presidential also-rans: Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Rick Santorum. And his speech, instead of trumpeting the righteousness of fiscal and social conservativism, was more about solving the nation’s problems with big ideas.


“Americans are looking for the type of leadership that transcends bipartisanship,” Perry said.


He credited states with engineering answers to health care, jobs and the environment.


“They are sick and tired of the same old Washington food fights that we see too often. That people are scoring political points and they think that’s more important than policy solutions,” Perry said.


In his speech, Cruz placed himself as a happy bull in Washington’s china shop, upsetting the status quo and working to represent tea party conservatism.


“There’s a tradition in the Senate that freshmen should be seen and not heard. I haven’t entirely managed to comply with that,” he joked, referencing a filibuster and his attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act through a government shutdown.


He said he would continue such efforts, drawing his power not from the Senate but from movement conservatives.


Cruz told the crowd that the Reagan revolution “didn’t come from Washington. Washington despised Ronald Reagan. If you have a candidate that Washington adores, run and hide.”


Regardless of their national ambitions, Cruz dismissed talk of any intrastate rivalry between the two.


“I am a big fan of Governor Perry’s,” he said.


“I understand it’s more interesting to write stories about battles between people than common ground. But Rick Perry and I agree on a good many things,” he said.


Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak said Cruz and Perry probably don’t see each other as their main rivals to the presidency.


“They’re both delicately throwing brush-back pitches,” Mackowiak said, but they’re also appealing to different constituents.


Perry is running as a long-time executive who has managed a state with the best economy in the nation. Cruz is firing up the grass roots and leading a conservative movement, Mackowiak said.


The conference is a good testing ground, he said.


“You rarely see these opportunities where presidential candidates compete head-to-head, see what messages they’re testing,” Mackowiak said.


Cruz will still need to show voters he’s ready, with limited experience, to be president, and Perry will need to convince supporters that he won’t falter at important times, he said.


For GOP activists, they have both made headway.


“I really would like to see him run again,” attendee Cheryl Blanke said of Perry after the governor posed in a picture with her.


In the least, she said, “I see him in a cabinet position.”


But the candidate to watch, she said, is Cruz.


“Ted Cruz has that something you can’t teach,” she said. “He just resonates.”


Follow Christy Hoppe on Twitter at @christyhoppe.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1hLFxWo

6 Mt. Rainier climbers presumed dead; families head to Seattle - Los Angeles Times


Four mountain climbers and two guides escorting them to the summit of Mt. Rainier were presumed dead after searchers found a trail of scattered equipment on Saturday, authorities said.


Gary Harrington, operations director for Alpine Ascents International, which was leading the expedition, told the Los Angeles Times that families of the six were traveling from around the country to Seattle on Saturday night. Authorities did not immediately release the climbers’ names, but a family member identified one of them as Mark Mahaney, a 26-year-old from St. Paul, Minn.


The company told reporters that the lead guide with the group was Matt Hegeman, who was also a regular on Mt. Shasta in Northern California.


Rescuers flew over the glaciers of Mt. Rainier National Park on Saturday morning and early afternoon looking for the climbing group, which was last heard from 6 p.m. Wednesday by satellite phone.


The searchers could see camping and climbing gear on Carbon Glacier about 9,500 feet up the 14,400-foot mountain, the fifth-tallest mountain in the Lower 48. As they got closer, authorities picked up pings from emergency avalanche beacons apparently buried in the snow. By late afternoon, park officials said that they believed there was no chance of survival because "all indications point toward a fall of 3,300 feet from near the party’s last known location."


“This incident represents a horrific loss for our guide partners and the families and loved ones of every one of the climbers lost on the mountain,” park Supt. Randy King said in a statement. “The climbing community is a small one and a close one, and a loss of this magnitude touches many. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this tragic accident.”


Mahaney had reached the summit of Mt. Rainier before, but this time around, he was trying a new route -- the Liberty Ridge route, one of the toughest and deadliest ways up the mountain.


“Nothing will be easy on this climb,” he wrote on his Facebook page last month.


During Easter, a family member told him not to make the trek. “There’s nothing going to stop me,” he said, according to his uncle, Rob Mahaney.


Mahaney, 53, said by phone Saturday night that his nephew would only talk about two things: mountains and his girlfriend. His Facebook page was filled with photographs of both.


Mark Mahaney regularly went to an indoor rock climbing gym, never missed a chance to scale walls of ice and had dreamed of heading to Mt. Everest someday.


“He just loved the exhilaration,” his uncle said. “He was a very energetic child, and climbing just kind of filled his niche. This is what gives us a warm feeling -- he was doing what he absolutely loved.”


Nearly 11,000 people attempted to scale Mt. Rainier in 2013, and in most years about half of those who try reach the top, according to National Park Service statistics. Forty rescue operations were required last year.


Since 1897, at least 89 people have died on Mt. Rainier during summit climbs, according to the park service. In June 1981, 11 climbers were killed after being buried under giant chunks of ice in what's widely regarded as the worst climbing accident in U.S. history. Since then, an average of one death has been recorded each year on Mt. Rainier.


"This mountain and Carbon Glacier is very dynamic, with continuous rockfall and ice fall," a park spokeswoman told KOMO-TV. "No one is immune to that, no matter how skilled you are."


About 200 people were on the mountain about this time last year, which is considered early in the climbing season. Some of the climbs on Mt. Rainier can be completed in a few hours, though most people take two or three days to reach the summit.


The climbers at the center of Saturday’s search were reported missing Friday evening, when they didn't return to the trailhead as scheduled at 4:30 p.m.


Last week the park service reported the Liberty Ridge route as being in good condition with soft snow on the ground during the day. Snow flurries passed through the national park late Wednesday.


The climbers were at nearly 13,000 feet on Wednesday night when they radioed in to the offices of the Seattle-based guide company, which is one of three that operate on Mt. Rainier.


Five Sherpas from Alpine Ascents were among the 16 people killed in April on Mt. Everest in the Himalayas. They were struck by an avalanche in what is believed to be the deadliest accident on the world's highest mountain.


The second deadliest climbing disaster in the U.S. is believed to have occurred on Oregon’s Mt. Hood in May 1986. A blizzard froze to death seven students and two teachers from the Oregon Episcopal School.


Officials at Mt. Rainier said it could be weeks or months, if ever, before the climbers’ bodies are recovered from the hazardous terrain. Aircraft are expected to fly over the site regularly to monitor it as the snow melts.


Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

8:40 p.m.: This post has been updated with family comments and other details.










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Cruz wins straw poll of group that once was wild about Perry - Dallas Morning News


NEW ORLEANS — In an audition of their nascent presidential themes, the two titans of Texas politics performed as top acts of the Republican Leadership Conference on Saturday.


U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. Rick Perry played to 1,500 conservative activists, blasting Washington and laying out their scripts of how to change it.


But on this platform, the younger Cruz upstaged the political veteran, winning the conference’s presidential straw poll and radiating the excitement and promise that Perry had ignited three years before.


“I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is a Ronald Reagan reincarnation that we need to right the course of the nation,” said attendee George Peterson.


The dual performances before the GOP activists come at a time when Cruz has risen as a hero of movement conservatives and Perry has succeeded in repairing some of the damage done by his humiliating performance in the last presidential contest.


Both Texans burnished their strengths before bedrock conservatives, stopping in Louisiana as part of their increasingly national tours.


Perry was fresh from Iowa, the third trip this year to the state with the first presidential contest. In the past three weeks, Perry has been to Florida, New York and Pennsylvania, and last week he met in Austin with a contingent of 13 conservative leaders from New Hampshire.


Cruz was just back from tours of Israel, Poland and Ukraine, where he met foreign leaders and dove into national security issues. Soon after his speech, and before Perry spoke, Cruz jetted to New York to appear as a guest Sunday on This Week on ABC.


In other ways, the two men arrived at the conference from different places.


At the 2011 conference, two months before he announced his campaign for president, Perry gave a fiery speech that was interrupted by chants of “Run, Rick, run.”


Saturday, Perry found himself in a pack of presidential also-rans: Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Rick Santorum. And his speech, instead of trumpeting the righteousness of fiscal and social conservativism, was more about solving the nation’s problems with big ideas.


“Americans are looking for the type of leadership that transcends bipartisanship,” Perry said.


He credited states with engineering answers to health care, jobs and the environment.


“They are sick and tired of the same old Washington food fights that we see too often. That people are scoring political points and they think that’s more important than policy solutions,” Perry said.


In his speech, Cruz placed himself as a happy bull in Washington’s china shop, upsetting the status quo and working to represent tea party conservatism.


“There’s a tradition in the Senate that freshmen should be seen and not heard. I haven’t entirely managed to comply with that,” he joked, referencing a filibuster and his attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act through a government shutdown.


He said he would continue such efforts, drawing his power not from the Senate but from movement conservatives.


Cruz told the crowd that the Reagan revolution “didn’t come from Washington. Washington despised Ronald Reagan. If you have a candidate that Washington adores, run and hide.”


Regardless of their national ambitions, Cruz dismissed talk of any intrastate rivalry between the two.


“I am a big fan of Governor Perry’s,” he said.


“I understand it’s more interesting to write stories about battles between people than common ground. But Rick Perry and I agree on a good many things,” he said.


Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak said Cruz and Perry probably don’t see each other as their main rivals to the presidency.


“They’re both delicately throwing brush-back pitches,” Mackowiak said, but they’re also appealing to different constituents.


Perry is running as a long-time executive who has managed a state with the best economy in the nation. Cruz is firing up the grass roots and leading a conservative movement, Mackowiak said.


The conference is a good testing ground, he said.


“You rarely see these opportunities where presidential candidates compete head-to-head, see what messages they’re testing,” Mackowiak said.


Cruz will still need to show voters he’s ready, with limited experience, to be president, and Perry will need to convince supporters that he won’t falter at important times, he said.


For GOP activists, they have both made headway.


“I really would like to see him run again,” attendee Cheryl Blanke said of Perry after the governor posed in a picture with her.


In the least, she said, “I see him in a cabinet position.”


But the candidate to watch, she said, is Cruz.


“Ted Cruz has that something you can’t teach,” she said. “He just resonates.”


Follow Christy Hoppe on Twitter at @christyhoppe.









Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1rwDnU8

Pastor: Released soldier has mental toughness to recover - USA TODAY



38 1 LINKEDIN MORE

The newly freed soldier who spent nearly five years in captivity in Afghanistan has the mental and physical toughness to survive the experience, his former pastor said.


Bowe Bergdahl grew up in a conservative Christian family in Idaho, studied ballet, was home-schooled, spent time in a Buddhist monastery and finally served in a parachute infantry regiment of the Army's 25th Infantry Division.


"If there's anybody I can think of pulling through this, and doing well, it's Bowe," said Philip Proctor, who was pastor of Sovereign Redeemer Presbyterian church in Boise, Idaho, when Bergdahl was a teenager.


"He has the mental and physical stamina not to be crushed by this experience," Proctor said.


MORE: Bergdahl freed in Afghanistan


Bergdahl — the last servicemember unaccounted for in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars — was released Saturday after being captured in 2009. The 28-year-old soldier is currently at a medical clinic in the U.S. base at Bagram, Afghanistan, said Army Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale, a spokesman for the Department of Defense. He'll eventually travel to Germany before heading back to the states.


At the White House on Saturday evening, Bergdahl's parents, Bob and Jani, joined President Obama, who praised the troops and government officials who rescued their son.


"We will continue to stay strong for Bowe while he recovers," Jani Bergdahl said after Obama turned the podium over to her.


Bob Bergdahl, the sergeant's father, said he is not sure whether his son can still speak English, and he made some of his remarks in what appeared to be the Pashtun language. "I'm your father, Bowe," the elder Bergdahl said at one point.


OBAMA: Bergdahl 'was never forgotten'


Bob Bergdahl quit his job as a driver for UPS two or three years before retirement so he could spend all his time trying to win the release of his son, Proctor said, adding the family traveled to Washington, D.C., often to meet with officials about their son.


Although raised in the Orthodox Presbyterian church, when he was in his late teens, Bergdahl spent time in a Buddhist monastery in the Pacific Northwest.


"He was going through an exploratory phase in life. He'd grown up in a conservative Christian home and he was trying to figure out if this was his faith or his parents' faith," said Proctor.


Bergdahl's decision to join the military wasn't a surprise to people who knew him.


It came partly out of a desire "to better understand a different part of the world and to try to see for himself what was going on," said Proctor. "That would be a very Bowe thing to do."


News of Bergdahl's release spread quickly in his hometown, where residents began planning a welcome home celebration, the Associated Press reported. An annual event called "Bring Bowe Back" scheduled for June 28 was quickly renamed "Bowe Is Back."


People in the Wood River Valley community, which includes Hailey, began celebrating Bergdahl's release as soon as they got the news, and they say it's a celebration that's been a long time coming.


"I got tingly. I thought it was great because I know the parents, or I know his dad, and just I can't, I couldn't, imagine the joy that they're feeling," said Wood River Valley resident Mark Swenke.


Rachael Malone, who works in Bergdahl's hometown of Hailey, tied balloons to street signs and light poles around town to help spread the message that Bergdahl is finally free.


"I think it's great. He's been gone for a while and I think that it'll be really nice for everybody to see him back here," she said.


Contributing: David Jackson in Washington, D.C., KTVB in Hailey, Idaho.


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6 Mt. Rainier climbers presumed dead; families head to Seattle - Los Angeles Times


Four mountain climbers and two guides escorting them to the summit of Mt. Rainier were presumed dead after searchers found a trail of scattered equipment on Saturday, authorities said.


Gary Harrington, operations director for Alpine Ascents International, which was leading the expedition, told the Los Angeles Times that families of the six were traveling from around the country to Seattle on Saturday night. Authorities did not immediately release the climbers’ names, but a family member identified one of them as Mark Mahaney, a 26-year-old from St. Paul, Minn.


The company told reporters that the lead guide with the group was Matt Hegeman, who was also a regular on Mt. Shasta in Northern California.


Rescuers flew over the glaciers of Mt. Rainier National Park on Saturday morning and early afternoon looking for the climbing group, which was last heard from 6 p.m. Wednesday by satellite phone.


The searchers could see camping and climbing gear on Carbon Glacier about 9,500 feet up the 14,400-foot mountain, the fifth-tallest mountain in the Lower 48. As they got closer, authorities picked up pings from emergency avalanche beacons apparently buried in the snow. By late afternoon, park officials said that they believed there was no chance of survival because "all indications point toward a fall of 3,300 feet from near the party’s last known location."


“This incident represents a horrific loss for our guide partners and the families and loved ones of every one of the climbers lost on the mountain,” park Supt. Randy King said in a statement. “The climbing community is a small one and a close one, and a loss of this magnitude touches many. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this tragic accident.”


Mahaney had reached the summit of Mt. Rainier before, but this time around, he was trying a new route -- the Liberty Ridge route, one of the toughest and deadliest ways up the mountain.


“Nothing will be easy on this climb,” he wrote on his Facebook page last month.


During Easter, a family member told him not to make the trek. “There’s nothing going to stop me,” he said, according to his uncle, Rob Mahaney.


Mahaney, 53, said by phone Saturday night that his nephew would only talk about two things: mountains and his girlfriend. His Facebook page was filled with photographs of both.


Mark Mahaney regularly went to an indoor rock climbing gym, never missed a chance to scale walls of ice and had dreamed of heading to Mt. Everest someday.


“He just loved the exhilaration,” his uncle said. “He was a very energetic child, and climbing just kind of filled his niche. This is what gives us a warm feeling -- he was doing what he absolutely loved.”


Nearly 11,000 people attempted to scale Mt. Rainier in 2013, and in most years about half of those who try reach the top, according to National Park Service statistics. Forty rescue operations were required last year.


Since 1897, at least 89 people have died on Mt. Rainier during summit climbs, according to the park service. In June 1981, 11 climbers were killed after being buried under giant chunks of ice in what's widely regarded as the worst climbing accident in U.S. history. Since then, an average of one death has been recorded each year on Mt. Rainier.


"This mountain and Carbon Glacier is very dynamic, with continuous rockfall and ice fall," a park spokeswoman told KOMO-TV. "No one is immune to that, no matter how skilled you are."


About 200 people were on the mountain about this time last year, which is considered early in the climbing season. Some of the climbs on Mt. Rainier can be completed in a few hours, though most people take two or three days to reach the summit.


The climbers at the center of Saturday’s search were reported missing Friday evening, when they didn't return to the trailhead as scheduled at 4:30 p.m.


Last week the park service reported the Liberty Ridge route as being in good condition with soft snow on the ground during the day. Snow flurries passed through the national park late Wednesday.


The climbers were at nearly 13,000 feet on Wednesday night when they radioed in to the offices of the Seattle-based guide company, which is one of three that operate on Mt. Rainier.


Five Sherpas from Alpine Ascents were among the 16 people killed in April on Mt. Everest in the Himalayas. They were struck by an avalanche in what is believed to be the deadliest accident on the world's highest mountain.


The second deadliest climbing disaster in the U.S. is believed to have occurred on Oregon’s Mt. Hood in May 1986. A blizzard froze to death seven students and two teachers from the Oregon Episcopal School.


Officials at Mt. Rainier said it could be weeks or months, if ever, before the climbers’ bodies are recovered from the hazardous terrain. Aircraft are expected to fly over the site regularly to monitor it as the snow melts.


Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

8:40 p.m.: This post has been updated with family comments and other details.










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Cruz wins straw poll of group that once was wild about Perry - Dallas Morning News


NEW ORLEANS — In an audition of their nascent presidential themes, the two titans of Texas politics performed as top acts of the Republican Leadership Conference on Saturday.


U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz and Gov. Rick Perry played to 1,500 conservative activists, blasting Washington and laying out their scripts of how to change it.


But on this platform, the younger Cruz upstaged the political veteran, winning the conference’s presidential straw poll and radiating the excitement and promise that Perry had ignited three years before.


“I believe in my heart that Ted Cruz is a Ronald Reagan reincarnation that we need to right the course of the nation,” said attendee George Peterson.


The dual performances before the GOP activists come at a time when Cruz has risen as a hero of movement conservatives and Perry has succeeded in repairing some of the damage done by his humiliating performance in the last presidential contest.


Both Texans burnished their strengths before bedrock conservatives, stopping in Louisiana as part of their increasingly national tours.


Perry was fresh from Iowa, the third trip this year to the state with the first presidential contest. In the past three weeks, Perry has been to Florida, New York and Pennsylvania, and last week he met in Austin with a contingent of 13 conservative leaders from New Hampshire.


Cruz was just back from tours of Israel, Poland and Ukraine, where he met foreign leaders and dove into national security issues. Soon after his speech, and before Perry spoke, Cruz jetted to New York to appear as a guest Sunday on This Week on ABC.


In other ways, the two men arrived at the conference from different places.


At the 2011 conference, two months before he announced his campaign for president, Perry gave a fiery speech that was interrupted by chants of “Run, Rick, run.”


Saturday, Perry found himself in a pack of presidential also-rans: Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Rick Santorum. And his speech, instead of trumpeting the righteousness of fiscal and social conservativism, was more about solving the nation’s problems with big ideas.


“Americans are looking for the type of leadership that transcends bipartisanship,” Perry said.


He credited states with engineering answers to health care, jobs and the environment.


“They are sick and tired of the same old Washington food fights that we see too often. That people are scoring political points and they think that’s more important than policy solutions,” Perry said.


In his speech, Cruz placed himself as a happy bull in Washington’s china shop, upsetting the status quo and working to represent tea party conservatism.


“There’s a tradition in the Senate that freshmen should be seen and not heard. I haven’t entirely managed to comply with that,” he joked, referencing a filibuster and his attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act through a government shutdown.


He said he would continue such efforts, drawing his power not from the Senate but from movement conservatives.


Cruz told the crowd that the Reagan revolution “didn’t come from Washington. Washington despised Ronald Reagan. If you have a candidate that Washington adores, run and hide.”


Regardless of their national ambitions, Cruz dismissed talk of any intrastate rivalry between the two.


“I am a big fan of Governor Perry’s,” he said.


“I understand it’s more interesting to write stories about battles between people than common ground. But Rick Perry and I agree on a good many things,” he said.


Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak said Cruz and Perry probably don’t see each other as their main rivals to the presidency.


“They’re both delicately throwing brush-back pitches,” Mackowiak said, but they’re also appealing to different constituents.


Perry is running as a long-time executive who has managed a state with the best economy in the nation. Cruz is firing up the grass roots and leading a conservative movement, Mackowiak said.


The conference is a good testing ground, he said.


“You rarely see these opportunities where presidential candidates compete head-to-head, see what messages they’re testing,” Mackowiak said.


Cruz will still need to show voters he’s ready, with limited experience, to be president, and Perry will need to convince supporters that he won’t falter at important times, he said.


For GOP activists, they have both made headway.


“I really would like to see him run again,” attendee Cheryl Blanke said of Perry after the governor posed in a picture with her.


In the least, she said, “I see him in a cabinet position.”


But the candidate to watch, she said, is Cruz.


“Ted Cruz has that something you can’t teach,” she said. “He just resonates.”


Follow Christy Hoppe on Twitter at @christyhoppe.









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Pastor: Released soldier has mental toughness to recover - USA TODAY



23 1 LINKEDIN MORE

The newly freed soldier who spent nearly five years in captivity in Afghanistan has the mental and physical toughness to survive the experience, his former pastor said.


Bowe Bergdahl grew up in a conservative Christian family in Idaho, studied ballet, was home-schooled, spent time in a Buddhist monastery and finally served in a parachute infantry regiment of the Army's 25th Infantry Division.


"If there's anybody I can think of pulling through this, and doing well, it's Bowe," said Philip Proctor, who was pastor of Sovereign Redeemer Presbyterian church in Boise, Idaho, when Bergdahl was a teenager.


"He has the mental and physical stamina not to be crushed by this experience," Proctor said.


MORE: Bergdahl freed in Afghanistan


Bergdahl — the last servicemember unaccounted for in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars — was released Saturday after being captured in 2009. The 28-year-old soldier is currently at a medical clinic in the U.S. base at Bagram, Afghanistan, said Army Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale, a spokesman for the Department of Defense. He'll eventually travel to Germany before heading back to the states.


At the White House on Saturday evening, Bergdahl's parents, Bob and Jani, joined President Obama, who praised the troops and government officials who rescued their son.


"We will continue to stay strong for Bowe while he recovers," Jani Bergdahl said after Obama turned the podium over to her.


Bob Bergdahl, the sergeant's father, said he is not sure whether his son can still speak English, and he made some of his remarks in what appeared to be the Pashtun language. "I'm your father, Bowe," the elder Bergdahl said at one point.


OBAMA: Bergdahl 'was never forgotten'


Bob Bergdahl quit his job as a driver for UPS two or three years before retirement so he could spend all his time trying to win the release of his son, Proctor said, adding the family traveled to Washington, D.C., often to meet with officials about their son.


Although raised in the Orthodox Presbyterian church, when he was in his late teens, Bergdahl spent time in a Buddhist monastery in the Pacific Northwest.


"He was going through an exploratory phase in life. He'd grown up in a conservative Christian home and he was trying to figure out if this was his faith or his parents' faith," said Proctor.


Bergdahl's decision to join the military wasn't a surprise to people who knew him.


It came partly out of a desire "to better understand a different part of the world and to try to see for himself what was going on," said Proctor. "That would be a very Bowe thing to do."


News of Bergdahl's release spread quickly in his hometown, where residents began planning a welcome home celebration, the Associated Press reported. An annual event called "Bring Bowe Back" scheduled for June 28 was quickly renamed "Bowe Is Back."


People in the Wood River Valley community, which includes Hailey, began celebrating Bergdahl's release as soon as they got the news, and they say it's a celebration that's been a long time coming.


"I got tingly. I thought it was great because I know the parents, or I know his dad, and just I can't, I couldn't, imagine the joy that they're feeling," said Wood River Valley resident Mark Swenke.


Rachael Malone, who works in Bergdahl's hometown of Hailey, tied balloons to street signs and light poles around town to help spread the message that Bergdahl is finally free.


"I think it's great. He's been gone for a while and I think that it'll be really nice for everybody to see him back here," she said.


Contributing: David Jackson in Washington, D.C., KTVB in Hailey, Idaho.


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Families travel to Seattle after 6 Mt. Rainier climbers presumed dead - Los Angeles Times


Four mountain climbers and two guides escorting them to the summit of Mt. Rainier were presumed dead after searchers found a trail of scattered equipment on Saturday, authorities said.


Gary Harrington, operations director for Alpine Ascents International, which was leading the expedition, told the Los Angeles Times that families of the six were traveling from around the country to Seattle on Saturday night. Authorities did not immediately release the climbers’ names, but a family member identified one of them as Mark Mahaney, a 26-year-old from St. Paul, Minn.


The company told reporters that the lead guide with the group was Matt Hegeman, who was also a regular on Mt. Shasta in Northern California.


Rescuers flew over the glaciers of Mt. Rainier National Park on Saturday morning and early afternoon looking for the climbing group, which was last heard from 6 p.m. Wednesday by satellite phone.


The searchers could see camping and climbing gear on Carbon Glacier about 9,500 feet up the 14,400-foot mountain, the fifth-tallest mountain in the Lower 48. As they got closer, authorities picked up pings from emergency avalanche beacons apparently buried in the snow. By late afternoon, park officials said that they believed there was no chance of survival because "all indications point toward a fall of 3,300 feet from near the party’s last known location."


“This incident represents a horrific loss for our guide partners and the families and loved ones of every one of the climbers lost on the mountain,” park Supt. Randy King said in a statement. “The climbing community is a small one and a close one, and a loss of this magnitude touches many. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this tragic accident.”


Mahaney had reached the summit of Mt. Rainier before, but this time around, he was trying a new route -- the Liberty Ridge route, one of the toughest and deadliest ways up the mountain.


“Nothing will be easy on this climb,” he wrote on his Facebook page last month.


During Easter, a family member told him not to make the trek. “There’s nothing going to stop me,” he said, according to his uncle, Rob Mahaney.


Mahaney, 53, said by phone Saturday night that his nephew would only talk about two things: mountains and his girlfriend. His Facebook page was filled with photographs of both.


Mark Mahaney regularly went to an indoor rock climbing gym, never missed a chance to scale walls of ice and had dreamed of heading to Mt. Everest someday.


“He just loved the exhilaration,” his uncle said. “He was a very energetic child, and climbing just kind of filled his niche. This is what gives us a warm feeling -- he was doing what he absolutely loved.”


Nearly 11,000 people attempted to scale Mt. Rainier in 2013, and in most years about half of those who try reach the top, according to National Park Service statistics. Forty rescue operations were required last year.


Since 1897, at least 89 people have died on Mt. Rainier during summit climbs, according to the park service. In June 1981, 11 climbers were killed after being buried under giant chunks of ice in what's widely regarded as the worst climbing accident in U.S. history. Since then, an average of one death has been recorded each year on Mt. Rainier.


"This mountain and Carbon Glacier is very dynamic, with continuous rockfall and ice fall," a park spokeswoman told KOMO-TV. "No one is immune to that, no matter how skilled you are."


About 200 people were on the mountain about this time last year, which is considered early in the climbing season. Some of the climbs on Mt. Rainier can be completed in a few hours, though most people take two or three days to reach the summit.


The climbers at the center of Saturday’s search were reported missing Friday evening, when they didn't return to the trailhead as scheduled at 4:30 p.m.


Last week the park service reported the Liberty Ridge route as being in good condition with soft snow on the ground during the day. Snow flurries passed through the national park late Wednesday.


The climbers were at nearly 13,000 feet on Wednesday night when they radioed in to the offices of the Seattle-based guide company, which is one of three that operate on Mt. Rainier.


Five Sherpas from Alpine Ascents were among the 16 people killed in April on Mt. Everest in the Himalayas. They were struck by an avalanche in what is believed to be the deadliest accident on the world's highest mountain.


The second deadliest climbing disaster in the U.S. is believed to have occurred on Oregon’s Mt. Hood in May 1986. A blizzard froze to death seven students and two teachers from the Oregon Episcopal School.


Officials at Mt. Rainier said it could be weeks or months, if ever, before the climbers’ bodies are recovered from the hazardous terrain. Aircraft are expected to fly over the site regularly to monitor it as the snow melts.


Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

8:40 p.m.: This post has been updated with family comments and other details.










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Cruz wins presidential straw poll at summit - St. Augustine Record


NEW ORLEANS — Texas Sen. Ted Cruz has won the latest 2016 presidential straw poll at a conservative summit in Louisiana.


Cruz took 30 percent of the vote at the Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans. He edged out conservative speaker and author Ben Carson.


Organizers at the annual conference say about a third out of 1,500 delegates voted in the straw poll. Delegates had to pay to register for the conference and vote in the straw poll.


Cruz promised delegates Saturday to continue his uncompromising approach on Capitol Hill.


Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Texas Gov. Rick Perry trailed Cruz and Carson in the poll.


***


STRAW POLL RESULTS


Candidate Percent


Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas) 30.33%


Ben Carson 29.38%


Sen. Rand Paul (Ky.) 10.43%


Mike Huckabee 5.06%


Texas Gov. Rick Perry 4.9%


Florida Rep. Curt Clawson 4.58%


Jeb Bush 4.42


Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.) 3.32


Rick Santorum 2.37%


Rep. Paul Ryan (Wis.) 2.05%


Allen West 2.05%


New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie 1.11%









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Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl: Flight to freedom - CNN





  • Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl writes on a paper plate because the helicopter is too loud

  • "SF?" he writes to the crew in a shorthand for "Special Forces?"

  • "Yes," at least one tells him, "we've been looking for you for a long time!"

  • Bergdahl breaks down after realizing he's freed after five years in enemy captivity




(CNN) -- It was another day in nearly five years of captivity for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, and he didn't know what the 18 Taliban fighters had in store for him Saturday.


There, in the rugged mountains of eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border, the heavily armed fighters turned Bergdahl over to U.S. military commandos.


The soldier's plight had come to an end.


Within minutes he was airborne. The helicopter's rotors whooped so loudly that Bergdahl couldn't communicate clearly with the men on board.


So he grabbed a paper plate and wrote three characters: "SF?"


The men understood: Special Forces?


The U.S. commandos didn't bother to write back.


"Yes!" shouted at least one over the roar of the flight. "We've been looking for you for a long time!"


Captivity


The long road to freedom began for Bergdahl with his capture on June 30, 2009, in Afghanistan's Paktika province, where he was deployed with the 25th Infantry Division.


The soldier disappeared after finishing a guard shift at a combat outpost.


It was about 4:30 a.m. when he was first reported missing, and by 7 a.m. his comrades began an all-out search to find him, according to secret military reports made public by WikiLeaks in 2010.


But there was no sign of the soldier. According to the reports, radio conversations between suspected militants picked up by U.S. reconnaissance aircraft confirmed he had been captured.


Conflicting details have since emerged about how the militants managed to capture Bergdahl. Published accounts have varied widely, from claims he walked off the post to another that he was grabbed from a latrine.


U.S. officials believe he was captured by the Taliban, but may have been held by the Haqqani Network, a terror group that operates along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. The group is aligned with the Taliban and al Qaeda.


In the ensuing years, there were occasional video clips released by his captors. The so-called proof-of-life videos appeared to show the soldier gaunt and disheveled. Over time, he appeared with a beard


The U.S. government acknowledged in May 2012 that it had been engaged in direct talks with the Taliban to free Bergdahl. The Taliban, according to officials, broke off those talks.


For more than year, there was no word of the soldier.


Road to freedom


Then, in November 2013, the Taliban signaled it was prepared to talk, according to senior administration officials.


In return, the United States asked for proof of life, they said.


That proof came in December in the form of a video of Bergdahl, the first in three years. And it showed the effects years of captivity had on the soldier, who appeared haggard and unwell.


With neither U.S. officials or the Taliban trusting each other, Qatari officials took on the role of intermediary.


The negotiations began in earnest last week, with Qatar ferrying messages back and forth between U.S. officials and the Taliban.


It culminated in Doha, with the agreement that called for the handover of Bergdahl in exchange for five detainees held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, the administration officials said.


As Taliban fighters headed with Bergdahl toward an agreed upon meeting point in Afghanistan, on the other side of the world Qataris officials were waiting for the five detainees to be released.


According to senior administration officials, the Qatari officials met the detainees on a runway at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base.


How the Qataris signaled to the Taliban that the detainees were in the custody is unclear, and administration officials have not detailed the communications.


Flight to freedom


It was late afternoon Saturday in Afghanistan, about 10:30 a.m. ET, when Bergdahl surrounded by 18 Taliban fighters was led to a meeting point.


There, waiting, were U.S. commandos, according to the officials. In the air above, helicopter gunships circled.


Slowly, Bergdahl walked toward the commandos.


It is believed the soldier was searched by the commandos, who as a matter of protocol would check to make sure the Taliban had not strapped explosives on him.


Within a matter of minutes, Bergdahl was aboard a helicopter bound for Bagram Air Base.


On the helicopter, with the knowledge he was in the hands of Special Forces, Bergdahl broke down and cried.


He was free.


CNN's Michael Martinez contributed to this report.









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Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl: Flight to freedom - CNN





  • Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl writes on a paper plate because the helicopter is too loud

  • "SF?" he writes to the crew in a shorthand for "Special Forces?"

  • "Yes," at least one tells him, "we've been looking for you for a long time!"

  • Bergdahl breaks down after realizing he's freed after five years in enemy captivity




(CNN) -- It was another day in nearly five years of captivity for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, and he didn't know what the 18 Taliban fighters had in store for him Saturday.


There, in the rugged mountains of eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border, the heavily armed fighters turned Bergdahl over to U.S. military commandos.


The soldier's plight had come to an end.


Within minutes he was airborne. The helicopter's rotors whooped so loudly that Bergdahl couldn't communicate clearly with the men on board.


So he grabbed a paper plate and wrote three characters: "SF?"


The men understood: Special Forces?


The U.S. commandos didn't bother to write back.


"Yes!" shouted at least one over the roar of the flight. "We've been looking for you for a long time!"


Captivity


The long road to freedom began for Bergdahl with his capture on June 30, 2009, in Afghanistan's Paktika province, where he was deployed with the 25th Infantry Division.


The soldier disappeared after finishing a guard shift at a combat outpost.


It was about 4:30 a.m. when he was first reported missing, and by 7 a.m. his comrades began an all-out search to find him, according to secret military reports made public by WikiLeaks in 2010.


But there was no sign of the soldier. According to the reports, radio conversations between suspected militants picked up by U.S. reconnaissance aircraft confirmed he had been captured.


Conflicting details have since emerged about how the militants managed to capture Bergdahl. Published accounts have varied widely, from claims he walked off the post to another that he was grabbed from a latrine.


U.S. officials believe he was captured by the Taliban, but may have been held by the Haqqani Network, a terror group that operates along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. The group is aligned with the Taliban and al Qaeda.


In the ensuing years, there were occasional video clips released by his captors. The so-called proof-of-life videos appeared to show the soldier gaunt and disheveled. Over time, he appeared with a beard


The U.S. government acknowledged in May 2012 that it had been engaged in direct talks with the Taliban to free Bergdahl. The Taliban, according to officials, broke off those talks.


For more than year, there was no word of the soldier.


Road to freedom


Then, in November 2013, the Taliban signaled it was prepared to talk, according to senior administration officials.


In return, the United States asked for proof of life, they said.


That proof came in December in the form of a video of Bergdahl, the first in three years. And it showed the effects years of captivity had on the soldier, who appeared haggard and unwell.


With neither U.S. officials or the Taliban trusting each other, Qatari officials took on the role of intermediary.


The negotiations began in earnest last week, with Qatar ferrying messages back and forth between U.S. officials and the Taliban.


It culminated in Doha, with the agreement that called for the handover of Bergdahl in exchange for five detainees held at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, the administration officials said.


As Taliban fighters headed with Bergdahl toward an agreed upon meeting point in Afghanistan, on the other side of the world Qataris officials were waiting for the five detainees to be released.


According to senior administration officials, the Qatari officials met the detainees on a runway at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base.


How the Qataris signaled to the Taliban that the detainees were in the custody is unclear, and administration officials have not detailed the communications.


Flight to freedom


It was late afternoon Saturday in Afghanistan, about 10:30 a.m. ET, when Bergdahl surrounded by 18 Taliban fighters was led to a meeting point.


There, waiting, were U.S. commandos, according to the officials. In the air above, helicopter gunships circled.


Slowly, Bergdahl walked toward the commandos.


It is believed the soldier was searched by the commandos, who as a matter of protocol would check to make sure the Taliban had not strapped explosives on him.


Within a matter of minutes, Bergdahl was aboard a helicopter bound for Bagram Air Base.


On the helicopter, with the knowledge he was in the hands of Special Forces, Bergdahl broke down and cried.


He was free.


CNN's Michael Martinez contributed to this report.









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Six climbers on Mt. Rainier presumed dead - Los Angeles Times


Four mountain climbers and two guides escorting them to the summit of Mt. Rainier are presumed dead after searchers found a trail of scattered equipment on Saturday, an official said.


Gary Harrington, operations director for Alpine Ascents International, which was leading the expedition, told the Los Angeles Times that families of the six were traveling from around the country to Seattle on Saturday night. The names of the climbers were not immediately released.


Rescuers flew over the glaciers of Mt. Rainier National Park on Saturday morning and early afternoon looking for the climbing group, which was heard from on Wednesday night.


The searchers could see camping and climbing gear on Carbon Glacier about 9,500 feet up the 14,400-foot mountain, the fifth-tallest mountain in the Lower 48. As they got closer, authorities picked up pings from emergency beacons apparently buried in the snow. By late afternoon, park officials told reporters that they believed there was no chance of survival.


Harrington said the company agreed with the assessment. Just what happened to the climbers remained unclear.


Nearly 11,000 people attempted to scale Mt. Rainier in 2013, and in most years about half of those who try reach the top, according to National Park Service statistics. Forty rescue operations were required last year.


Since 1897, at least 89 people have died on Mt. Rainier during summit climbs, according to the park service. In 1981, 11 climbers were killed after being buried under giant chunks of ice in what's widely regarded as the worst climbing accident in U.S. history. Since then, an average of one death has been recorded each year on Mt. Rainier.


"This mountain and Carbon Glacier is very dynamic, with continuous rockfall and ice fall," a park spokeswoman told KOMO-TV. "No one is immune to that, no matter how skilled you are."


About 200 people were on the mountain about this time last year, which is considered early in the climbing season. Some of the climbs on Mt. Rainier can be completed in a few hours, though most people take two or three days to reach the summit.


The climbers at the center of Saturday’s search were reported missing Friday evening, when they didn't return on schedule. They were attempting the Liberty Ridge route, one of the toughest and deadliest ways up the mountain.


Last week the park service reported the Liberty Ridge route as being in good condition with soft snow on the ground during the day. Snow flurries passed through the national park late Wednesday.


The climbers were at nearly 13,000 feet on Wednesday night when they radioed in to the offices of the Seattle-based guide company, which is one of three that operate on Mt. Rainier.


Five Sherpas from Alpine Ascents were among the 16 people killed in April on Mt. Everest in the Himalayas. They were struck by an avalanche in what is believed to be the deadliest accident on the world's highest mountain.


Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times







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Sudan to free woman facing death for Christian faith: report - New York Daily News


Meriam Ibrahim and husband Daniel Wani were married in 2011. Both are Christian.Global Justice Center in Sudan Meriam Ibrahim and husband Daniel Wani were married in 2011. Both are Christian.

Sudanese authorities are planning to free a woman who was sentenced to death for refusing to renounce her Christian faith, the BBC reported.


Meriam Ibrahim, who gave birth to a baby girl earlier this week at the clinic at the Omdurman women's prison near Khartoum, will be released in a few days, a senior official told the BBC.


Ibrahim, 27, had been sentenced to death by hanging for apostasy, or “abandoning her faith.” She was given a period of time to renounce her Christian beliefs, but she refused.


In Sudan, conversion of Muslims to another religion is punishable by death.


Meriam Ibrahim’s husband, Daniel Wani, holds their newborn daughter at Omdurman women's prison in Sudan. Ibrahim’s hanging will be delayed for two years so she can nurse her baby.AFP PHOTO/HO/FAMILY Meriam Ibrahim’s husband, Daniel Wani, holds their newborn daughter at Omdurman women's prison in Sudan. Ibrahim’s hanging will be delayed for two years so she can nurse her baby.

The court ruled that it would not carry out her execution until she gave birth and will delay it for two years so she can nurse her child, according to Amnesty International.


Even though Ibrahim was raised Christian by her Ethiopian mother, her father was Muslim. Children are required by Sharia law to follow their father’s religion.


Ibrahim was also sentenced to 100 lashes for adultery because the court does not recognize her marriage to husband Daniel Wani, a Christian originally from South Sudan who is a U.S. citizen.


Daniel Wani, a U.S. citizen originally from South Sudan, is also a Christian, so Sudanese law does not recognize their marriage. The state will not give him custody of their other child, a 20-month-old boy, because the law considers the child to be a Muslim and he isn’t allowed to be raised by his Christian father.AFP PHOTO/HO/FAMILY Daniel Wani, a U.S. citizen originally from South Sudan, is also a Christian, so Sudanese law does not recognize their marriage. The state will not give him custody of their other child, a 20-month-old boy, because the law considers the child to be a Muslim and he isn’t allowed to be raised by his Christian father.

Muslim women in Sudan are forbidden to marry outside their faith, although Muslim men can marry non-Muslims.


On Friday, her family released photos taken Wednesday of Wani cradling their daughter.


Ibrahim and Wani also have a 20-month-old son, who is with his mother in jail.


Ibrahim's lawyers have said they have plans to appeal the death sentence.


With News Wire Services


vtaylor@nydailynews.com


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Cruz Wins Presidential Straw Poll at Republican Leadership Conference - MyArkLaMiss

New Orleans -- (CNN) Senator Ted Cruz won the 2016 Presidential straw poll at the Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans.

Cruz finished in first place in the annual conference's presidential straw poll at 30.33%. Dr. Ben Carson, a Fox News commentator and conservative activist, finished in second with 29.38% while Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, was third with 10.43%.


Fox News host and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Texas Governor Rick Perry rounded out the top five, at 5.06% and 4.90%, respectively.


More moderate Republicans also skipped the conference, but many fared much worse in the straw poll. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie came in dead last with 1.11% while Florida’s former Gov. Jeb Bush and current Sen. Marco Rubio and came in seventh and eighth at 4.42% and 3.32 %, respectively.









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Taliban Releases US Soldier Held Captive for Five Years--Update - Wall Street Journal



By Adam Entous and Julian E. Barnes

WASHINGTON--Taliban militants in Afghanistan on Saturday handed over Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who had been held as a prisoner of war for almost five years, to U.S. Special Operations Forces in exchange for the release of five Afghan Taliban prisoners from the Guantanamo Bay prison.


The breakthrough was brokered by Qatar, which sent representatives to the U.S. military prison in Cuba to take custody of the five detainees, who used to be high-ranking members of the former Taliban government. The five were being flown to the small Gulf state where they will be required to stay for at least a year to ensure they don't return to Afghanistan to join the war there, U.S. officials said.


Some members of Congress criticized the prisoner exchange. Rep. Howard P. McKeon (R., Calif.), chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and Sen. James Inhofe (R., Okla.), ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the means by which Sgt. Bergdahl's freedom was secured need to be examined. They said that U.S. adversaries now have a strong incentive to capture Americans.


The prisoner exchange marked the culmination of years of on-again, off-again talks aimed at securing the release of Sgt. Bergdahl, who was captured near his base in Afghanistan and was the only American prisoner of war. Broader U.S. attempts to broker reconciliation talks in Afghanistan have foundered.


The 28-year-old sergeant was released by the Taliban at 10:30 a.m. EDT to several dozen U.S. Special Operations Forces who arrived at a rendezvous point in eastern Afghanistan by helicopter. There, the Americans were met by roughly 18 members of the Taliban, who handed over Sgt. Bergdahl without incident. Sgt. Bergdahl was then loaded onto a helicopter and flown to an American base for evaluation. On the helicopter, Sgt. Bergdahl wrote on a paper plate "SF?" A member of the U.S. Special Operations Forces team replied, "Yes, we have been looking for you for a long time."


Sgt. Bergdahl then broke down and cried, a U.S. official said.


U.S. officials said Mr. Bergdahl appeared to be in good condition and was able to walk. He is on his way from Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan to the U.S. military hospital at Landstuhl, Germany, a defense official said.


His parents, who live in Hailey, Idaho, were in Washington, D.C., and were notified that their son had been released. In a statement, his parents, Bob and Jani Bergdahl, said: "We cannot wait to wrap our arms around our only son."


President Barack Obama said in a written statement that he was honored to call Sgt. Bergdahl's parents "to express our joy that they can expect his safe return, mindful of their courage and sacrifice throughout this ordeal."


On Saturday evening, Mr. Obama made a surprise appearance in the White House Rose Garden together with Mr. Bergdahl's parents.


"While Bowe was gone, he was never forgotten," Mr. Obama said, adding that the U.S. does not ever leave its men and women in uniform behind.


"We're committed to winding down the war in Afghanistan, and we are committed to closing Gitmo," he said. "But we also made an ironclad commitment to bring our prisoners of war home. That's who we are as Americans."


Bob Bergdahl said his son is having trouble speaking English and that his recovery will be a "considerable task for our family."


Though Taliban leaders have so far balked at entering peace talks with the U.S., Obama administration officials said they hoped the prisoner exchange would lead to a broader dialogue as the U.S. withdraws its forces from Afghanistan.


"It is our hope Sergeant Bergdahl's recovery could potentially open the door for broader discussions among Afghans about the future of their country by building confidence that it is possible for all sides to find common ground," Mr. Obama said in his statement.


A defense official said the transfer was done in compliance with current U.S. law that mandates notification of Congress before detainees are transferred. "We have a memorandum of understanding with the government of Qatar, we have the appropriate security assurances from them," the defense official said.


But Rep. McKeon and Sen. Inhofe were critical of the swap. In a statement Saturday, they said "America has maintained a prohibition on negotiating with terrorists for good reason." The prisoner exchange "may have consequences for the rest of our forces and all Americans," they said. "Our terrorist adversaries now have a strong incentive to capture Americans. That incentive will put our forces in Afghanistan and around the world at even greater risk."


Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican, welcomed Sgt. Bergdahl's release, but called the Taliban detainees being transferred to Qatar "hardened terrorists who have the blood of Americans and countless Afghans on their hands."


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) praised those who worked to secure the release of Sgt. Bergdahl. He also said that President Obama "rightly recognized our solemn obligation to take every possible measure to protect and defend the men and women who serve our nation."


The U.S. identified the five Afghan detainees as Mohammed Fazl, Noorullah Noori, Abdul Haq Wasiq, Khairullah Khairkhwa and Muhammad Nabi Omari. U.S. officials said they had departed Saturday from Guantanamo Bay to Qatar aboard a U.S. military aircraft.


The five were labeled as high-risk, according to secret independent assessments by the U.S. Defense Department that were made public by WikiLeaks.


Mr. Khairkhwa, the Taliban's former Minister of Interior, was one of the Taliban's liaisons to al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, according to Defense Department assessments. Mr. Wasiq served as the Taliban's deputy minister of intelligence until the Taliban was overthrown in 2001.


Qatar has provided the U.S. with assurances that the five detainees, once they arrive in Qatar, won't pose a threat to the U.S. These assurances, according to U.S. officials, include at least a one-year travel ban, which bars them from leaving Qatari territory.


Then-Pfc. Bergdahl was captured on June 30, 2009, by militants after leaving his U.S. base in Paktika province in eastern Afghanistan. The circumstances surrounding his decision to walk off the base have remained murky.


While a prisoner, he has received regular military promotions. However, the circumstances of his captivity have never been clear. U.S. officials have said he was believed to be held for most of the last five years in Pakistan by the Haqqani network, an insurgent group that is allied with but separate from the Taliban, and not directly by the Taliban.


But officials said Sgt. Bergdahl was handed over by Taliban, not Haqqani militants.


The U.S. held secret discussions with the Taliban starting in late 2011 and early 2012, but the Taliban broke those contacts off. The U.S. hasn't had any direct talks with the Taliban since then, except for messages relayed back-and-forth through intermediaries, most important the government of Qatar.


Last year, the Taliban opened an office in Qatar, a move backed by the U.S. as part of negotiations aimed at securing Sgt. Bergdahl's release. That effort soon bogged down in controversy and was abandoned.


Then last November, the Taliban signaled to the U.S. that it was prepared to restart indirect talks on the limited issue of a prisoner exchange. The Taliban leaders involved, however, made clear that they weren't prepared to discuss the broader issue of reconciliation, U.S. officials said.


The talks progressed relatively quickly. First, the Taliban provided the U.S. with a "proof of life"--a video released earlier this year that showed Sgt. Bergdahl alive. The Americans, in turn, agreed to release all five Afghan Taliban detainees at Guantanamo Bay at one time, instead of in stages.


"Several weeks ago an opportunity arose to resume talks on Bergdahl and we seized that opportunity," a senior defense official said.


The final prisoner swap negotiations were secretly conducted through Qatar, which acted as a mediator, passing messages back and forth.


Prisoner swaps have been rare, but not unprecedented, during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The Qais and Laith Qazali, two brothers accused of killing U.S. soldiers in Iraq, were released by Iraqi officials in exchange for a British hostage and the bodies of four other U.K. nationals, although the U.S. publicly denied the brothers were freed as a prisoner exchange.


Colleen McCain Nelson contributed to this article.


Write to Adam Entous at adam.entous@wsj.com and Julian E. Barnes at julian.barnes@wsj.com









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Sudan to free woman facing death for Christian faith: report - New York Daily News


Meriam Ibrahim and husband Daniel Wani were married in 2011. Both are Christian.Global Justice Center in Sudan Meriam Ibrahim and husband Daniel Wani were married in 2011. Both are Christian.

Sudanese authorities are planning to free a woman who was sentenced to death for refusing to renounce her Christian faith, the BBC reported.


Meriam Ibrahim, who gave birth to a baby girl earlier this week at the clinic at the Omdurman women's prison near Khartoum, will be released in a few days, a senior official told the BBC.


Ibrahim, 27, had been sentenced to death by hanging for apostasy, or “abandoning her faith.” She was given a period of time to renounce her Christian beliefs, but she refused.


In Sudan, conversion of Muslims to another religion is punishable by death.


Meriam Ibrahim’s husband, Daniel Wani, holds their newborn daughter at Omdurman women's prison in Sudan. Ibrahim’s hanging will be delayed for two years so she can nurse her baby.AFP PHOTO/HO/FAMILY Meriam Ibrahim’s husband, Daniel Wani, holds their newborn daughter at Omdurman women's prison in Sudan. Ibrahim’s hanging will be delayed for two years so she can nurse her baby.

The court ruled that it would not carry out her execution until she gave birth and will delay it for two years so she can nurse her child, according to Amnesty International.


Even though Ibrahim was raised Christian by her Ethiopian mother, her father was Muslim. Children are required by Sharia law to follow their father’s religion.


Ibrahim was also sentenced to 100 lashes for adultery because the court does not recognize her marriage to husband Daniel Wani, a Christian originally from South Sudan who is a U.S. citizen.


Daniel Wani, a U.S. citizen originally from South Sudan, is also a Christian, so Sudanese law does not recognize their marriage. The state will not give him custody of their other child, a 20-month-old boy, because the law considers the child to be a Muslim and he isn’t allowed to be raised by his Christian father.AFP PHOTO/HO/FAMILY Daniel Wani, a U.S. citizen originally from South Sudan, is also a Christian, so Sudanese law does not recognize their marriage. The state will not give him custody of their other child, a 20-month-old boy, because the law considers the child to be a Muslim and he isn’t allowed to be raised by his Christian father.

Muslim women in Sudan are forbidden to marry outside their faith, although Muslim men can marry non-Muslims.


On Friday, her family released photos taken Wednesday of Wani cradling their daughter.


Ibrahim and Wani also have a 20-month-old son, who is with his mother in jail.


Ibrahim's lawyers have said they have plans to appeal the death sentence.


With News Wire Services


vtaylor@nydailynews.com


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