Chattanooga Times Free Press

GRINER’S HOME; NOW LET’S BRING WHELAN AND FOGEL HOME

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The people who become Vladimir Putin’s pawns never realize the vicious game ensnaring them.

Until it’s too late.

WNBA star Brittney Griner made the mistake of carrying in her luggage vape cartridges with a minuscule amount of cannabis oil as she traveled to Russia to play basketball in February. Nine months later, Griner found herself in a penal colony outside Moscow on a drug possession conviction that hardly warranted the nine-year sentence she began serving.

On Thursday, Griner’s unimaginab­le ordeal came to an end. A prisoner swap negotiated between the Kremlin and President Joe Biden sent Griner on her way home in exchange for Viktor Bout, the Russian arms dealer known to the world as the “Merchant of Death.”

Griner’s reunificat­ion with her wife, Cherelle Griner, her family and teammates on the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury squad will surely be celebrated across America. At the same time, Americans should also celebrate Griner’s steely courage — she was up against a Russian leader with a notorious disdain for the rule of law, who is obsessed with what transactio­nal gain he can extract from the plight of others.

Not involved in the swap was former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan, a corporate security executive arrested in Moscow in 2018 on espionage charges that the U.S. says were concocted by Russian authoritie­s. Whelan was convicted in 2020 and remains imprisoned in Russia on a 16-year sentence.

What Putin wants in exchange for Whelan remains unknown, but we trust Biden is working on his release just as earnestly and expeditiou­sly as his administra­tion toiled to secure Griner’s freedom. The Kremlin rejected Washington’s bid to include Whelan in the Griner-Bout swap; Moscow preferred a one-for-one exchange, as it did in April when it agreed to release former U.S. Marine Trevor Reed in order to secure the homecoming of Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko.

It’s an ugly game Putin plays, turning ordinary people into hostages he can stow away like poker chips. The price for Griner was steep. Washington has alleged that Bout’s arms clients have included al-Qaida and the Taliban. The inspiratio­n for the Nicolas Cage character in the 2005 film “Lord of War,” Bout never cared who he was selling to or what side they were on. He ignored arms embargoes and sold weapons to rebels in Africa and government forces at war with those rebels.

The U.S. has long suspected that Bout also had ties to Russia’s feared military intelligen­ce agency, the GRU, which might explain the Kremlin’s fervent desire to return him to Russian soil.

Biden had no choice but to make the deal. The future Griner faced in Russia was harrowing.

In interviews, Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, the former oil tycoon who angered Putin and spent 10 years in Russian prisons, talked of forced labor, potatoes and bread for dinner.

Griner’s new future is a life back home. Griner already has two Olympic gold medals, and it would be America’s delight to see her vie for a third in Paris in 2024.

Biden deserves credit for Griner’s homecoming. In the meantime, however, the White House cannot waver in its mission to do the same for Whelan, who on Thursday told CNN via telephone, “I don’t know why I’m still here.”

The Biden administra­tion should also take a closer look at the case of Marc Fogel, a Pennsylvan­ia teacher whose case mirrors Griner’s. Earlier this year, a Russian court sentenced him to 14 years in prison after he was caught at a Moscow airport with medical marijuana in his luggage.

We expect Putin to reprehensi­bly treat Whelan, Fogel and any other American detained in Russia the same way he treated Griner — as a commodity, a bargaining chip.

Biden must do all he can to rescue Whelan and Fogel from Putin’s inhumanity.

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