Griner lands in U.S. as Russia's Bout greets family in Moscow
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[December 09, 2022]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Basketball star Brittney Griner
landed in the United States on Friday after 10 months in Russian
detention following a prisoner swap with arms dealer Viktor Bout who
flew home hours earlier to embrace his family on the airport tarmac in
Moscow.
Securing Thursday's swap, after months of painstaking negotiations, was
a rare instance of U.S.-Russian cooperation after Moscow's invasion of
Ukraine, although the Kremlin was quick to say it did not show improving
relations.
Russia's state media trumpeted the swap as a win for Moscow, after the
release of a man who the U.S. Department of Justice has described as one
of the world's most prolific arms dealers who had sold weapons across
the globe to terrorists and America's enemies for decades. Bout always
denied the charges.
U.S. President Joe Biden, in announcing her release on Thursday, said
the swap ended what he described as months of "hell" for Griner, 32, a
two-time Olympic gold medalist and star of the Women's National
Basketball Association's Phoenix Mercury.
"So happy to have Brittney back on U.S. soil. Welcome home BG!," U.S.
Special Presidential Envoy Roger Carstens, the chief U.S. hostage
coordinator, said in a post on Twitter.
Griner, who flew into San Antonio, Texas, before dawn on Friday, had
been arrested on Feb. 17 at a Moscow airport after vape cartridges
containing cannabis oil, which is banned in Russia, were found in her
luggage.
As Griner flew back home, Bout arrived in Moscow and hugged his mother
and wife after stepping onto the tarmac, television images showed.
He said it was difficult to find the words to describe his feelings, in
an interview with the state-run news outlet RT. He also said he had not
encountered much anti-Russian sentiment during his imprisonment in the
United States.
Bout rejected the idea that Russia got the best of the exchange however,
or that it had made Biden look "weak".
"I wouldn't draw such a conclusion ... I'm pretty sure that neither our
leadership, nor any other, thinks in such notions - whether you are weak
or not," he said.
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A person steps off the plane that
arrived carrying U.S. basketball star Brittney Griner, following her
release from prison in Russia, in San Antonio, Texas, U.S., December
9, 2022. REUTERS/Kaylee Greenlee Beal
Biden personally tracked the negotiations closely but it was only in
recent weeks that he made the "very painful" decision to provide
clemency to Bout to get the swap done, a senior U.S. official told
reporters on Thursday.
'SORRY STATE'
Griner, who had been detained in Russia since a week before the
invasion of Ukraine, traveled from a Russian penal colony to Moscow,
then to Abu Dhabi airport in the United Arab Emirates where the
exchange took place, with the two walking past each other on the
tarmac, U.S. officials said.
"Bilateral relations continue to remain in a sorry state," TASS news
agency quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying on Friday.
"The talks were exclusively on the topic of the exchange. It's
probably wrong to draw any hypothetical conclusions that this may be
a step towards overcoming the crisis in bilateral relations," he
said.
But Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Moscow and
Washington would continue to talk about possible prisoner swaps
directly, without intermediaries, the RIA Novosti news agency
reported.
The two countries also swapped prisoners in April when Russia
released former U.S. Marine Trevor Reed and the United States
released Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko.
(Writing by Edmund Blair and Susan Heavey; Reporting by Kaylee
Greenlee Beal in San Antonio, Guy Faulconbridge and Felix Light in
Moscow; Additional reporting by Rhea Binoy in Bengaluru; Editing by
Alison Williams)
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