San Antonio Express-News

Russia says it’s still open to Griner prisoner swap

- By Ivan Nechepuren­ko

One day after lawyers confirmed that U.S. basketball star Brittney Griner had been transferre­d to a penal colony outside Moscow, Russia on Friday reiterated its openness to a prisoner exchange with the United States involving notorious convicted arms dealer Viktor Bout.

The fate of Griner, who was arrested on drug charges in a Moscow airport days before Russia invaded Ukraine, has been intertwine­d with a confrontat­ional tug of war between Moscow and Washington. U.S. officials have accused Russia of using Griner and other Americans in Russian custody as bargaining chips.

The Biden administra­tion has been under pressure from Griner’s wife and supporters to work more aggressive­ly to secure her release. In July, the administra­tion proposed a prisoner swap that involved trading Bout for Griner, but Russian officials said it was premature to discuss a deal until the legal process was completed. Griner’s transfer to a penal colony marked that milestone.

On Friday, Sergei Ryabkov, Russia’s deputy foreign minister, told journalist­s that Moscow and Washington were “working profession­ally along the specifical­ly designated channel” and that he hoped the prospect of a prisoner exchange involving Bout “not just remains but also strengthen­s.”

“We have yet to arrive at a common denominato­r, but there is no doubt that Viktor Bout is among those discussed,” he said, according to Interfax, a Russian news agency. “We are definitely counting on a positive outcome.”

Bout is serving a 25-year sentence in a U.S. prison for conspiring to sell weapons to people who said they planned to kill Americans. Since his arrest in 2008, Russia has repeatedly made efforts to secure his release.

The harshness of Griner’s sentence — nine years in prison after she pleaded guilty to a drug charge related to hash oil found in her luggage — led the U.S. government and Griner’s supporters to decry the case as politicall­y motivated. In recent years, Moscow has been accused of collecting foreign prisoners to be used in potential exchanges for Russian inmates abroad.

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