Waterloo Region Record

Four countries now have links to American detained in Russia

- AMIE FERRIS-ROTMAN

MOSCOW — The internatio­nal links to an American charged with espionage in Russia widened Friday as Ireland became the fourth nation to acknowledg­e Paul Whelan as a citizen and seek consular access.

The expanding passport list for Whelan, a 48-year-old former U.S. marine arrested last week in Moscow, has boosted the complexiti­es and diplomatic fallout for Moscow.

In addition to demands by the Trump administra­tion for greater details on Russia’s claims against Whelan, three other nations are now in the mix and offering potential assistance.

Whelan also carried passports from Canada, where he was born, as well as from Britain and Ireland. Whalen obtained the two European passports through family lineage.

Both Britain and Ireland are now seeking consular access to Whelan, who is being held in a detention facility on the outskirts of Moscow.

Britain and Russia’s relationsh­ip sharply deteriorat­ed last year after a former Russian double agent, Sergei Skripal, was poisoned in England with a nerve agent and spent months recovering. British authoritie­s have blamed Russia for carrying out the attack — an assertion Moscow denies.

The minimal amount of informatio­n provided by Russia — which is on holiday until after the Russian Orthodox Church marks Christmas on Monday — only adds to the intrigue. There has been no word from the Kremlin on Whelan’s arrest.

But many in the West question whether the arrest was in retaliatio­n to U.S. conviction of Russian gun rights activist Maria Butina.

In December, Butina pleaded guilty to conspiring with a senior Russian official to infiltrate U.S. conservati­ve groups. Butina, 30, is the first Russian national to be convicted of seeking to influence U.S. policy in the run-up to the 2016 election by acting as a foreign agent.

Shortly before Butina pleaded guilty, Putin said she was not known to any of his spy agencies. The Foreign Ministry has gone to great lengths to paint Butina as a political prisoner, notably by launching a wide-ranging social media campaign.

“We don’t agree with individual­s being used in diplomatic chess games,” British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt told Sky News. “Because it is desperatel­y worrying, not just for the individual but their families, and we are extremely worried about him and his family as we hear this news.”

Russian authoritie­s have not said what Whelan is accused of doing beyond the relatively broad charge of espionage which, if convicted, could land him between 10 and 20 years behind bars.

A person familiar with Whelan’s case said he has a total of four passports. “He collected them as a game. There was an ongoing competitio­n with his sister to see who could get the most,” the person said, who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y surroundin­g the situation.

 ?? WHELAN FAMILY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Paul Whelan, 48, is a U.S. citizen born in Canada who was charged with espionage in Russia.
WHELAN FAMILY THE NEW YORK TIMES Paul Whelan, 48, is a U.S. citizen born in Canada who was charged with espionage in Russia.

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