Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Maverick deal-maker

Can Richardson get detainees Griner, Whelan out of Russia?

- By Michael Crowley

W ASHINGTON —I t was days before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and Paula and Joey Reed were losing hope of seeing their son, Trevor, freed from a Russian prison. Then a call came from an aide to Bill Richardson.

The aide said Richardson, a former New Mexico politician known for striking deals with foreign strongmen to free U.S. prisoners, was headed to Moscow to negotiate Trevor’s release.

“I said, ‘What about the State Department?’ ” Joey Reed recalled in an interview. The aide, Mickey Bergman, replied that the department’s attitude had been, “butt out of this,” according to Joey Reed, and that the trip was “basically a guerrilla operation.”

Two months later, Trevor Reed, a U.S. Marine veteran, was free. After more than two years behind bars on charges that he had assaulted two police officers, he was released April 27 in a prisoner exchange between the Kremlin and the Biden administra­tion.

“I really feel that if Richardson hadn’t gotten involved,” Trevor would still be there, Paula Reed said.

Whether that is true, however, is hard to say. U.S. officials have never credited Richardson with any significan­t role in the release, instead describing their own urgent work to free Trevor Reed once his health began to fail. And after Richardson traveled to Moscow again in September, this time trying to win the release of the jailed Americans Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan, the Biden administra­tion signaled that his help was not welcome.

“Our concern is that private citizens attempting to broker a deal do not and cannot speak for the U.S. government,” State Department spokespers­on Ned Price said on Sept. 14. Freelance diplomacy, he warned, was “likely to hinder” efforts to free Griner and Whelan. He noted that Richardson’s trip had not been coordinate­d with the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.

Asked about Richardson later that day, a National Security Council spokespers­on, John Kirby, told CNN that “private citizens should not be in Moscow at all right now.”

In an interview, Richardson said he was still on the case and sought to downplay any disagreeme­nts.

“In these hostage relationsh­ips between government and private efforts, sometimes friction and tensions emerge,” he said. “On the Whelan-Griner case, we are working together and coordinati­ng our efforts.”

“But,” he added, “my first responsibi­lity is to the American hostages and their families, and not to the government.”

For decades in politics and as a private citizen, Richardson has helped win the release of Americans detained overseas, traveling to danger zones such as North Korea and Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and producing miracles the U.S. government alone could not.

Now the families of Whelan and

Griner — whose appeal of a nineyear sentence on drug smuggling charges was denied by a Russian court last month — are hoping Richardson can deliver again.

But several people who have worked with Richardson or followed his efforts closely are uneasy. They describe him as a rogue publicity hound who risks complicati­ng the Biden administra­tion’s delicate talks with Russia — and who may even be playing into the Kremlin’s hands.

Benefits and risks

The Biden administra­tion’s warnings about Richardson’s efforts follow other disputes in recent years over his role in prisoner exchanges and reflect the pressures of dealing with foreign government­s that turn American prisoners into bargaining chips.

“There are some clear benefits but also some real risks” that come with the involvemen­t of an outsider like Richardson, said Danielle Gilbert, a specialist in prisoner negotiatio­ns at the Dickey Center for Internatio­nal Understand­ing at Dartmouth College. Gilbert praised Richardson’s past successes and said he can play a valuable role by meeting with unsavory actors and brainstorm­ing ideas that would be off limits to U.S. officials.

The danger, she said, is that a freelance diplomat could wind up working at cross purposes with the U.S. government, potentiall­y “putting deals in jeopardy.”

During his long political career, Richardson, 74, was known for his folksy, unpretenti­ous style and self-promotiona­l skill.

After eight years as New Mexico’s governor and a failed 2008 Democratic presidenti­al bid, his political career ended when his nomination to be President Barack Obama’s commerce secretary was withdrawn amid a federal probe into state contractin­g while he was governor. The case was dropped.

Before that he served as a New Mexico congressma­n, as well as energy secretary and United Nations ambassador under President Bill Clinton. As a young member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee in the 1980s, he developed a flair for secretive back-channel diplomacy, and Clinton dispatched him on sensitive missions to places like Iraq, North Korea, Afghanista­n and Sudan.

Richardson once wrote a book titled “How to Sweet-Talk a Shark” and has shared such maxims as: “Respect the other side. Try to connect personally. Use sense of humor. Let the other side save face.”

Today he runs the Richardson Center for Global Engagement, which says it “promotes global peace and dialogue.” Based in a Santa Fe, New Mexico, office building, the center has just two fulltime employees: Richardson and Bergman, a former Israel Defense Forces paratroope­r who specialize­s in what he calls “fringe diplomacy.”

Richardson says the families of prisoners do not pay him. He never represents himself as working on behalf of the U.S. government, he says, but keeps U.S. officials briefed on his efforts.

He is now assisting several Americans held in Russia, he says, along with an American prisoner of war held by Russians in eastern Ukraine. But most prominent among them are Griner, a WNBA star arrested in February when authoritie­s at a Moscow airport found hash oil in her luggage, and Whelan, a security consultant arrested at a Moscow hotel in December 2018 and convicted of espionage.

The State Department considers them “wrongfully detained” and is treating them as hostages. Under growing pressure to act, the Biden administra­tion offered in June to trade Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer serving a long federal prison sentence, for Griner and Whelan. Russia has not publicly responded.

Richardson would not describe his contacts but often notes that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov served as his counterpar­t when he was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

According to Paula Reed, Richardson approached Lavrov about her son’s case and the Russian diplomat directed Richardson to “a wealthy third party.”

After Trevor Reed was freed in April, in exchange for the release of a Russian pilot convicted in a U.S. court of drug smuggling, Richardson publicly thanked a man named Ara Abramyan.

An Armenian businessma­n who lives in Moscow, Abramyan boasts of his close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has awarded him Russia’s prestigiou­s Order for Merit to the Fatherland.

Putin “gives instructio­ns, and I fulfill them,” Abramyan said in 2015.

While U.S. officials are tightlippe­d about the prospects of freeing Griner and Whelan, Richardson is willing to prognostic­ate.

“I remain cautiously positive about my prediction that a deal can be reached before the end of the year to bring Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan home,” he said. “From my experience, once the legal process concludes, there is an opportunit­y to make a deal.”

He warned of “a few bumps in the road nonetheles­s” but said “the White House strategy is sound and realistic.” He told CNN in early October that he expects a “two-fortwo” swap, returning two Russians for the pair of Americans.

U.S. officials have set no such timeline for a deal, however, nor is there evidence that the Biden administra­tion is willing to sweeten its known offer to return Bout, who was convicted in federal court in 2011 of conspiring to kill Americans.

Ongoing friction

There is evidence that Moscow welcomes Richardson’s role. On July 8, Russia’s state-run news service Tass quoted the country’s deputy foreign minister, Sergey Ryabkov, as saying that “the aspiration of such a respected figure to aid his compatriot­s is praisewort­hy.”

Speaking on CNN, Richardson was less politic about dealing with Biden administra­tion officials.

“There are a lot of nervous Nellies in the government that think they could know it all, and that’s not the case,” he said. “Look at my track record over 30 years.”

In recent years, friction with U.S. officials has been a recurring theme in Richardson’s work.

During the Trump administra­tion, Richardson tangled with officials over tactics and credit in the release of Xiyue Wang, an American graduate student imprisoned in Iran.

Last November, when Richardson brought home American journalist Danny Fenster on a chartered flight from Myanmar, the Biden administra­tion’s special envoy for hostage affairs, Roger Carstens, thanked him for “securing the release.”

But when Rolling Stone magazine recently wrote about the case, a White House spokespers­on corrected Carstens’ account, saying: “The government secured Fenster’s release.”

The White House declined to comment for this article.

Last month, after President Joe Biden approved a prisoner exchange with Venezuela that freed seven Americans, the Richardson Center released a statement citing Richardson’s many efforts on their behalf.

In a background briefing for reporters detailing the release, however, a senior administra­tion official did not mention Richardson at all but noted that only the U.S. president can grant clemency and therefore only the U.S. government can negotiate a prisoner exchange.

Similarly, U.S. officials have not described Richardson as key to Trevor Reed’s release.

In a July email to supporters, Paul Whelan’s brother, David, wrote that his family had contacted Richardson in early 2019 “when we were at sea” about how to help Paul. But he acknowledg­ed the limits of a freelance negotiator who cannot bargain on behalf of the U.S. government and might be unaware of official efforts.

“This means they can both help and hinder a possible resolution of a detainee’s case,” David Whelan added.

Paula Reed is sure Richardson helped. When Richardson flew to Moscow in February — on a private jet borrowed from FedEx founder Fred Smith — he was told by his intermedia­ry that Putin had personally approved trading Reed for jailed Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko, she said.

During a March 30 meeting in the Oval Office, Paula and Joey Reed said, they told Biden that they were aware of Putin’s offer. That made it nearly impossible, in their telling, for Biden not to act.

Richardson’s visit to Moscow “was critical,” Paula Reed said.

U.S. officials have not pointed to that meeting as decisive, however. And experts note that Biden has approved exchanges for other American prisoners without first meeting their families.

Paula Reed thinks Richardson deserves more credit from the Biden administra­tion. But she understand­s its frustratio­n.

“With Bill Richardson inserting himself, and then to take credit with these hostage returns, is kind of a negative deal” for U.S. officials, she said. “That’s all Richardson’s looking for: ‘Hey, thank you, we appreciate it.’ ”

 ?? EVGENIA NOVOZHENIN­A/POOL PHOTO ?? Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is trying to secure the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner, above, after she was arrested in Russia in February.
EVGENIA NOVOZHENIN­A/POOL PHOTO Former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is trying to secure the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner, above, after she was arrested in Russia in February.
 ?? DIMITAR DILKOFF/GETTY-AFP 2019 ?? Paul Whelan, a former U.S. Marine, was working as a security consultant when he was arrested in Russia in 2018.
DIMITAR DILKOFF/GETTY-AFP 2019 Paul Whelan, a former U.S. Marine, was working as a security consultant when he was arrested in Russia in 2018.
 ?? SETH WENIG/AP 2021 ?? Richardson’s private efforts have lately often resulted in friction with U.S. officials.
SETH WENIG/AP 2021 Richardson’s private efforts have lately often resulted in friction with U.S. officials.

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