The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces will consider a request by former Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl that his case be dismissed, or that other relief be granted, based on unlawful command influence. His attorneys have argued that comments made by President Trump possibly swayed the outcome of his trial.

The court made the announcement on Monday, months after the Army Court of Criminal Appeals rejected the notion that Trump's public comments, as well as those of the late Sen. John McCain, had influenced the proceedings, Army Times reported.

“Although there was some evidence of unlawful command influence adduced at trial and in the post-trial process, the government met its burden to demonstrate that an objective disinterested observer would not harbor a significant doubt as to the fairness of the proceedings,” the three-judge Army appeals court opinion read.

BERGDAHL DISHONORABLY DISCHARGED, NO JAIL TIME AFTER EMOTIONAL TRIAL

Bergdahl was spared prison time but sentenced in November 2017 to a dishonorable discharge, a reduction in rank to private and forfeiture of $10,000 in pay.

During the proceedings, then-presidential candidate Trump blasted Bergdahl, calling him “a no-good traitor who should have been executed” for abandoning his post in Afghanistan in 2009. McCain said in 2015 that his Senate committee would hold a hearing if Bergdahl weren't punished.

Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban after leaving his base and held for five years. The Hailey, Idaho, native was swapped for five Taliban prisoners in Guantanamo Bay and brought to the U.S. in 2014 by former President Barack Obama.

Bergdahl's defense attorney, Eugene Fidell, argued that Trump's and McCain's comments were so inflammatory that Bergdahl did not receive a fair trial.

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Following Bergdahl's sentencing, Trump tweeted it was a "complete and total disgrace to our country and to our military."

A date was not set for the appeals court hearing. Bergdahl's lawyers have 30 days to file their argument, according to the news outlet. The government will then have 30 days to file a response, after which the court will set a date for the hearing.

Fox News' Frank Miles contributes to this report.