Why Russians want arms trafficker
Figure said to be in line for proposed US prisoner swap
Shortly after his conviction in 2011 on charges including conspiring to kill American citizens, Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout relayed a defiant message through his lawyer, even though he faced the prospect of decades in prison.
Bout, his lawyer said, “believes this is not the end.”
More than a decade later, Bout, 55, may be nearing a chance for a new beginning even though he has served less than half of his 25-year prison sentence.
The United States, trying to negotiate the release of two Americans imprisoned in Russia — basketball star Brittney Griner and a former Marine, Paul Whelan — proposed exchanging them last month for Bout, according to a person briefed on the negotiations.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that the United States had made “a substantial proposal” to the Kremlin, but declined to discuss details of a possible swap and did not name Bout then or Friday after talks with his Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
Russian officials have pressed for Bout’s return since his conviction in 2011 by a New York jury on four counts that included conspiring to kill American citizens. Prosecutors said he had agreed to sell anti-aircraft weapons to drug enforcement informants who were posing as arms buyers for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.
The attorney general at the time, Eric Holder, called Bout “one of the world’s most prolific arms dealers.” Bout become notorious
among American intelligence officials, earning the nickname “Merchant of Death” as he evaded capture for years. His exploits helped inspire a 2005 film, “Lord of War,” that starred Nicolas Cage.
Now he is probably the highest profile Russian in U.S. custody and the prisoner Russia has campaigned the most vociferously to have returned. If he is sent back to Russia, it is likely to reignite the debate over the wisdom of engaging in prisoner exchanges for Americans the United States considers “wrongfully detained” — as is the case with Griner and Whelan.
In interviews with journalists, Bout has repeatedly denied accusations that he has worked for Russian intelligence agencies. But Mark Galeotti, an expert on Russia’s security services, said there are strong signs — Bout’s education, his social and professional ties, and his
logistical skills — that he is a member of, or at least was in close collaboration with, Russia’s military intelligence agency, known as the GRU.
“That is also the opinion of U.S. and other authorities — and it explains the reasons Russia has been so assiduously campaigning to get him back,” said Galeotti, a lecturer on Russia and transnational crime at University College London. “All countries try to get their citizens out of rough jurisdictions, but it is clear that it has been a particular priority for the Russians in getting Viktor Bout back.”
Bout grew up in Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, until his conscription into the Soviet military at age 18. After a term in the army, he studied Portuguese at the Military Institute of Foreign Languages in Moscow, a common entree to Russian intelligence services, and eventually became an air force officer.
The Soviet Union broke apart not long after Bout left the military. As Russia’s economy collapsed and criminal groups thrived, he moved to the United Arab Emirates and started a cargo company that grew to a fleet of 60 planes.
With military supplies of former Soviet states leaking onto the black market, his shipping empire delivered guns to rebels, militants and terrorists around the world, prosecutors said. In the new era of privatization in Russia, arms traffickers were able to use old Soviet-era social, military and business networks, and to also develop shell companies to hide transactions.
Bout was accused of selling weapons to al-Qaida, the Taliban and militants in Rwanda. According to several investigations and his U.S. indictment, he and his associates flouted arms embargoes in Sierra Leone, Congo and Algeria, where
he sold weapons to both government forces and rebels fighting them.
His ability to avoid being captured added to his notoriety among Western intelligence officials. In 1995, the Taliban forced down one of his planes in Afghanistan and imprisoned the crew. Bout and Russian officials somehow managed to get the crew out of the country: In 2003, he told The New York Times Magazine “they were extracted,” and in 2012, The New Yorker reported, he said they simply escaped.
U.S. authorities finally caught up with him in Bangkok in 2008. Bout met with undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agents he believed represented rebels from Colombia’s FARC, which the United States considered a terrorist organization until last year.
When the prospective buyers told him the weapons could be used to kill American pilots, Bout responded, “We have the same enemy,” prosecutors said.
Authorities arrested him on the spot. He was extradited to the United States in 2010 and two years later was sentenced to 25 years.
In the years since, Russian authorities have maintained Bout’s innocence and brought him up as a possible swap for other high-profile American and Ukrainian detainees held by Russia. He has been at the center of a Russian campaign — “We don’t abandon our own” — that has cast his arrest as unfair and politically motivated.
It is unclear whether Bout’s possible return would further encourage Russia to arrest Westerners who can be traded; Moscow denies allegations that it intentionally arrests people to force an exchange.
“The very real risk with this deal is that it stands to incentivize foreign powers to grab Americans off the streets and throw them in jail,” said Lee Wolosky, a National Security Council official in the Clinton administration who led the U.S. effort to capture Bout. “And the more prominent those traveling Americans are, the better.”
Andrei Soldatov, a Russian journalist and expert on the security services who is a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis, said that although Bout was the highest-profile Russian prisoner in America, there were many more Russians in U.S. prisons, particularly for hacking.
Russian authorities, Soldatov said, learned how to “create banks of hostages” in the early 2000s during a brutal war with the breakaway region of Chechnya, right after President Vladimir Putin came to power.
“It was a lesson they never quite forgot,” said Soldatov. Referring to Russian security agencies, he said, “It makes total sense, from their point of view, to do the same with the U.S.”