To ensure troops stayed on the lookout for Bergdahl, commanders had installed a screen saver on every American soldier's computer in Afghanistan that carried a photo of the captured sergeant as a reminder.
"I always wondered what happened to him," said Gloria Goomtam, 37, a US Army specialist. "I'm so happy for him."
But Bergdahl, held by insurgents for nearly five years, was never spotted by American forces or rescued in a raid.
The deal has sparked an outcry among some lawmakers that President Barack Obama sold out to Taliban "terrorists," but Goomtam said the agreement was worth it.
"To be honest, I'm still glad he's back, because we need him. It's better to have him back," she said.
"I did put myself in his situation and I thought, that could be me," she said. "You got to put yourself in his shoes."
Soldiers at the sprawling Bagram Airfield, the main hub for US forces in Afghanistan, were surprised to learn when they woke today that Bergdahl had been treated at their base's hospital and was free of his captors.
"My wife told me that a soldier had been freed and I knew who it was,"said Mashburn, a member of the 101st Airborne.
That Bergdahl's release came at a price, with five senior Taliban figures allowed to leave the US prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, posed a difficult dilemma, he said.
"Letting them (Taliban militants) go, I don't want to see that happen. At the same time, I would do anything for that soldier, " he said.
"I have a one-year-old girl. I can't imagine what his family were going through," he said.
"I couldn't bring myself to watch those," Mashburn said.
Bergdahl's release was reassuring for troops as it showed the US government had worked relentlessly to secure his freedom, he said.
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