Colin Nagy | December 14, 2022

The Prisoner Swap Edition

On politics, Russia, and leverage

Re-running this from the archives in light of the Brittany Griner release. Paul Whelan remains in captivity. -Colin (CJN)

Colin here. There is a recurring scene in high-flying espionage dramas and le Carré novels: the prisoner swap. It is always in some sort of neutral territory—a bridge, an airstrip—where prisoners are walked across a dividing line. Most times, there are heavily armed guards to ensure no funny business. 

Photo: AFP archives

The world witnessed a real-life version when American Trevor Reed was released by Russia in Turkey, in exchange for Russian citizen Konstantin Yaroshenko who was serving a lengthy sentence in the United States on cocaine-trafficking charges, according to The New York Times. Reed was detained in Russia for three years. The release came after months of negotiations and finally occurred when Reed was in failing health, after a rumored exposure to Tuberculosis and COVID-19 in confinement. Reed was a former Marine living in Russia, who was initially arrested for public intoxication. 

Another American and former Marine remains in captivity in the country. According to the Texas Tribune, “[Paul] Whelan is from Michigan and was arrested in Russia in 2018, accused of spying and sentenced to 17 years. Whelan is also a former Marine; however, he was discharged for bad conduct after being convicted of larceny.” He and his family have said he’s not a spy but a tourist who was set up by the government. The Russian FSB claim he took possession of a flash drive with photos and names of students from a school for border guards, a claim he calls “ludicrous.” 

Why is this interesting? 

We’ll never know the true backstory behind these cases. But it is interesting to see the commonality: Russia snapping up American citizens with a convenient military background on trumped-up charges, and holding them as political chits. 

These chits can be traded for priority prisoners that Russia wants back. Victor Bout was the big fish, who was recently released in a tarmac transfer.

Whelan told the BBC in an interview: “He says two names were always mentioned: arms dealer Victor Bout and Konstantin Yaroshenko, convicted on a drug-smuggling charge - Russians in prison in the United States.” Yaroshenko was just released in the Reed trade. Bout, also just released for Griner, is the notorious arms smuggler who ran an air-transport ring out of Belgium that involved everything from weapons for arming various hot zones to blood diamonds. (CJN)

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