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Prisoner swap between West and Russia frees reporter Evan Gershkovich and others

Paul Whelan, who has joint British and US citizenship, and Vladimir Kara-Murza, who has joint Russian and British nationality, have also been freed.

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Evan Gershkovich in a cage in a courthouse

The United States and other countries in the West have completed their biggest prisoner swap with Russia in post-Soviet history, officials said.

Among those released by Moscow include Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, Paul Whelan, a corporate security executive with joint British nationality from Michigan and Vladimir Kara-Murza, who has joint Russian and British nationality.

The trade followed years of secretive back-channel negotiations despite relations between Washington and Moscow being at their lowest point since the Cold War after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Paul Whelan
Paul Whelan also holds British citizenship (Sofia Sandurskaya, Moscow News Agency photo via AP, File)

The sprawling deal, which is the latest in a series of prisoner swaps negotiated between Russia and the US in the last two years but the first to require significant concessions from other countries, was heralded by US President Joe Biden as a diplomatic achievement in the final months of his administration.

Russia has secured the freedom of its own nationals convicted of serious crimes in the West by trading them for journalists, dissidents and other Westerners convicted and sentenced in a highly politicised legal system on charges the US considers bogus.

Under the deal, Russia released Mr Gershkovich, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal who was jailed in 2023 and convicted in July of espionage charges that he and the US vehemently denied and called baseless; Mr Whelan, a Michigan corporate security executive jailed since 2018 also on espionage charges he and Washington have denied; and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, a dual US-Russian citizen convicted in July of spreading false information about the Russian military, accusations her family and employer have rejected.

Others released include Mr Kara-Murza, a Kremlin critic and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer serving 25 years on charges of treason widely seen as politically motivated; associates of the late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny; and a German national arrested in Belarus.

Vladimir Kara-Murza holding up a fist in defiance
Vladimir Kara-Murza is among those who have been released (AP Photo, File)

The Russian side got Vadim Krasikov, who was convicted in Germany in 2021 of killing a former Chechen rebel in a Berlin park two years earlier, apparently on the orders of Moscow’s security services.

Russia also received two alleged sleeper agents who were jailed in Slovenia, as well as three men charged by federal authorities in the US, including Roman Seleznev, a convicted computer hacker and the son of a Russian politician and Vadim Konoshchenok, a suspected Russian intelligence operative accused of providing American-made electronics and ammunition to the Russian military. Norway returned an academic arrested on suspicions of being a Russian spy, and Poland also sent back a man it detained.

Thursday’s swap of 24 prisoners surpassed a deal involving 14 people that was struck in 2010. In that exchange, Washington freed 10 Russians living in the US as sleepers, while Moscow deported four Russians living in their homeland, including Sergei Skripal, a double agent working with British intelligence. He and his daughter in 2018 were nearly killed by nerve agent poisoning blamed on Russian agents.

Speculation had mounted for weeks that a swap was near because of a confluence of unusual developments, including a startlingly quick trial and conviction for Mr Gershkovich that Washington regarded as a sham. He was sentenced to 16 years in a maximum-security prison.

Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in court
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in court (AP/File)

In a trial that concluded in two days in secrecy in the same week as Mr Gershkovich’s, Ms Kurmasheva was convicted on charges of spreading false information about the Russian military that her family, employer and US officials rejected.

Also in recent days, several other figures imprisoned in Russia for speaking out against the war in Ukraine or over their work with Mr Navalny were moved from prison to unknown locations.

Mr Gershkovich was arrested March 29 2023, while on a reporting trip to the city of Yekaterinburg. Authorities claimed, without offering any evidence, that he was gathering secret information for the US. The son of Soviet emigres who settled in New Jersey, he moved to the country in 2017 to work for The Moscow Times newspaper before being hired by the Journal in 2022.

He had more than a dozen closed hearings over the extension of his pre-trial detention or appeals for his release. He was taken to the courthouse in handcuffs and appeared in the defendants’ cage, often smiling for the many cameras.

Brittney Griner playing basketball
The US released notorious arms trafficker Viktor Bout in exchange for getting back WNBA star Brittney Griner last year (Charlie Neibergall/AP)

US officials last year made an offer to swap Mr Gershkovich that was rejected by Russia, and Mr Biden’s administration had not made public any possible deals since then.

Mr Gershkovich was designated as wrongfully detained, as was Mr Whelan, who was detained in December 2018 after travelling to Russia for a wedding. Mr Whelan was convicted of espionage charges, which he and the US have also said were false and trumped up, and he was serving a 16-year prison sentence.

Mr Whelan had been excluded from prior high-profile deals involving Russia, including the April 2022 swap by Moscow of imprisoned marine veteran Trevor Reed for Konstantin Yaroshenko, a Russian pilot convicted in a drug trafficking conspiracy. That December, the US released notorious arms trafficker Viktor Bout in exchange for getting back US basketball star Brittney Griner, who had been jailed on drug charges.

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