Journal Pioneer

Russia: Too early to consider exchange of U.S. spy suspect

- BY JIM HEINTZ

Russia’s deputy foreign minister has brushed back suggestion­s that an American being held in Moscow on suspicion of spying could be exchanged for a Russian citizen.

The brother of Paul Whelan, however, tells The Associated Press that he can’t help but question whether the events are connected.

“You look at what’s going on and you wonder if this is just a large game of pieces being moved around,” David Whelan told the AP via Skype from Newmarket, Ontario. “You start to wonder if all of these things are connected. But at the same time, they could just be arbitrary events.” Paul Whelan, a former U.S. Marine who also holds Canadian, British and Irish citizenshi­p, was detained in Moscow in late December.

His arrest has led to speculatio­n that Russia could be using him to bargain for a Russian woman who has pleaded guilty to acting as a foreign agent in the United States.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Saturday that discussing a possible swap involving Whelan and Maria Butina would be premature because Whelan hasn’t been formally charged, according to Russian news agencies.

“As to the possibilit­y of exchanges of one sort of another, it’s impossible and incorrect to consider the question now when an official charge hasn’t even been presented,” Ryabkov was quoted as saying by state news agency RIA-Novosti.

“Charges will be presented in the near future,” he said, according to the Interfax agency. Some Russian news reports earlier cited unnamed sources as saying Whelan had been indicted on espionage charges that carry a possible prison sentence of 20 years.

Russian officials haven’t given details of Whelan’s suspected activities and he was initially identified only as an American. His concurrent Canadian, British and Irish citizenshi­ps became known on Friday.

U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman Jr. visited Whelan on Wednesday in Moscow’s Lefortovo Prison, a 130-year-old facility noted for strict conditions. Britain, Canada and Ireland have applied for consular access to him. Whelan, 48, was discharged from the Marines for bad conduct. He works as the global security director for a U.S. automobile parts manufactur­er and lives in Michigan. His family has said he was in Moscow to attend a wedding.

His brother, David, told the AP that Whelan loves to travel and likes to “interact with the people in the places that he goes,” but that Whelan would be too “conspicuou­s” to be selected as a spy. David Whelan said his family had had no direct contact with Paul and had received no details about the alleged espionage charges from either the Russian or U.S. government­s.

“He likes to go places and Russia happens to be a place where he knows people and when he’s there, he does go and visit,” David Whelan said.

Paul Whelan establishe­d an account on VKontakte, a social media service similar to Facebook that is popular among Russians, which showed he had scores of contacts in Russia. Many attended universiti­es affiliated with the military, civil aviation or technical studies. Many share his interest in sports and firearms. Also Saturday, the Foreign Ministry said it was seeking informatio­n about a Russian who was arrested Dec. 29 in Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands, a United States commonweal­th in the Pacific.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? This undated file photo provided by the Whelan family shows Paul Whelan in Iceland.
AP PHOTO This undated file photo provided by the Whelan family shows Paul Whelan in Iceland.

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