Elizabeth Rood, the U.S. chargée d'affaires in Moscow, told
Russia's state-owned RIA news agency that talks were continuing
through the "designated channel".
"The United States, as we have said, has put a significant
proposal on the table. We have followed up on that proposal and
we have proposed alternatives," she said. "Unfortunately, so far
the Russian Federation has not provided a serious response to
those proposals."
Basketball star Griner was taken this month to a penal colony in
the Russian region of Mordovia to serve a nine-year drug
sentence after being arrested in February with vape cartridges
containing cannabis oil. She said at her trial she used them to
relieve the pain from sports injuries and had not meant to break
the law.
Whelan, a former U.S. Marine, is serving 16 years in the same
region on charges of espionage, which he denies.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said on Nov. 18
he was hopeful of agreeing a prisoner swap that could see the
release of Viktor Bout, a convicted Russian weapons trafficker
who is in prison in the United States.
In her interview, Rood also held open the possibility of a
follow-up to a meeting between CIA Director William Burns and
Russian foreign intelligence chief Sergei Naryshkin in Istanbul
two weeks ago - the first publicly announced face-to-face
meeting between top officials of the two countries since Russia
invaded Ukraine in February.
"The United States has channels for managing risk with the
Russian Federation, particularly nuclear risks, and that was the
purpose of CIA director Burns’ meeting with his Russian
counterpart," Rood said.
"Director Burns did not negotiate anything and he did not
discuss a settlement of the conflict in Ukraine. I’m sure if
there’s a need for another conversation in that channel, it can
happen. There’s not anything scheduled that I know of."
Washington has said Burns used the meeting to warn about the
consequences of any Russian use of nuclear weapons. Russia has
declined to comment on what was discussed, describing the
subject matter as sensitive.
(Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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