Russian prisoner swap: Inside Putin's strategic exchange
The echoes of the high-profile prisoner exchange between Russia and Western countries have not yet faded. Vladimir Putin personally greeted the freed Russians, who had spied for the Kremlin in the West, at the airport. One of them, Roman Seleznev, shared his impressions of the meeting.
4 August 2024 10:29
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The 32-year-old hacker had been serving a sentence in the United States for hacking into databases of about 200 American companies. Seleznev did not hide his admiration for the reception organised by Putin's regime.
When we arrived, Vladimir Vladimirovich [Putin] personally shook my hand. I almost fainted when I got off the plane. We were told nothing about who was meeting us or what was going on....> I came out, staggering, I think. I see all this—the red carpet, the National Guard, and our president standing there, greeting us. I was in shock, of course—the convict reported.
He emphasised that "it meant a lot to him."
Historical prisoner exchange between Russia and the West
International agencies report that the largest prisoner exchange since the Cold War between Russia and Western countries took place in Ankara on Thursday. According to the Turkish service Anatolia, the operation involved 24 people from prisons in seven countries, including Poland, and two children.
In exchange for bringing its people out of the West, Vladimir Putin released political prisoners, including opposition activists and journalists, who were held as de facto hostages. Among them is "The Wall Street Journal" journalist Evan Gershkovich, who - according to commentators - was detained on alleged espionage charges precisely so the Kremlin could exert pressure on the US.
German citizen Rico Krieger, who was sentenced to death in Belarus and then pardoned by Alexander Lukashenko, was also reportedly deliberately drawn into the operational game to enable the Kremlin to exert pressure on Berlin.
According to Turkish authorities, 10 people, including two minors, were relocated to Russia, 13 to Germany, and three to the US. The exchange involved people from prisons in the US, Germany, Poland, Slovenia, Norway, Russia, and Belarus.