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Father, thank You for the release of unjustly imprisoned Americans. These are uncertain times. Give our leaders divine wisdom in diplomatic affairs.
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24 prisoners. 6 countries. The largest East-West prisoner swap since the Cold War brings WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich home.

From The Wall Street Journal. Russia freed wrongly convicted Wall Street Journal reporter Evan GershkovichĀ as part of the largest and most complex East-West prisoner swap since the Cold War, in which he and more than a dozen others jailed by the KremlinĀ were exchanged for RussiansĀ held in the U.S. and Europe, including a convicted murderer.

Gershkovich and other Americans left Russian aircraft at roughly 11:20 a.m. ET at an airport in Turkeyā€™s capital, Ankara. Gershkovich was then transported to an aircraft lounge on a Turkish bus. Russia had kept the 32-year-old behind bars for more than a year on a false allegation of espionage. It sentenced him in aĀ hurried and secret three-day trialĀ to 16 years in a high-security penal colony.

Moscow also released former Marine Paul Whelan, journalist Alsu Kurmasheva andĀ Vladimir Kara-Murza, aĀ British-Russian dissidentĀ and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist, sentenced to 25 years in prison on treason-related charges. Russia also released a number of political dissidents.

The sweeping deal involved 24 prisoners and at least six countries, and came together after months of negotiations at the highest levels of governments in the U.S., Russia and Germany, whose prisoner,Ā Russian hit man Vadim Krasikov, emerged as the linchpin to the arrangement. . . . a convicted murderer that Russian President Vladimir PutinĀ had been pushing to free since 2021. The former intelligence officer, a veteran of the Soviet-Afghan war, had shot and killed a rebel leader in a Berlin park, and was serving a life sentence.

The exchange is emblematic of a new era of state-sponsored hostage-taking by autocratic governments seeking leverage over rivals. It was negotiated as tensions soared between Russia and the West overĀ the war in Ukraine.

It also offers sobering evidence of the asymmetry between the U.S. and Russia in this new, piratical order. PutinĀ can order foreigners plucked from restaurants and hotels and given lengthy prison sentences on spurious chargesā€”something an American leader canā€™t do. . . .

The Biden administration has pursued a series of large prisoner swaps with hostile countries, including last yearĀ extracting 10 Americans and a fugitive from VenezuelaĀ and aĀ major deal with Iran in which the U.S. released billions of dollars in frozen revenue. Critics have questioned whether such deals encourage the arrest of more Americans. . . .

The State Department classifies a number of countries, including Russia and North Korea, as posing such a serious risk of detention that it discourages Americans from visiting. Privately, U.S. officials call them ā€œabductor statesā€ and fear their number will grow unless there are new measures to deter them. . . .

Putin and other officials had been increasingly vocal about doing a prisoner swap for Gershkovich and others since late last year. In a February interview with Tucker Carlson, Putin indicatedĀ he especially wanted Krasikov, who gunned down a rebel leader in broad daylight in a public park in the heart of the German capital in 2019.

Gershkovichā€”the first foreign correspondentĀ charged with espionage in Russia since the Soviet Union collapsedā€”was detained by Russiaā€™s Federal Security Service, or FSB, in March 2023, while on a reporting trip in Yekaterinburg, about 900 miles east of Moscow.

Prosecutors falsely said Gershkovich was gathering information about a defense contractor for the CIA. In fact, he was on assignment for the Journal. Gershkovich, the Journal and the U.S. government have all vehemently denied the accusation against him. . . .

Whelan, the longest-serving American deemed unlawfully detained in Russia, had also become a high-profile concern for Washington.

Included in Thursdayā€™s swap also was Kurmasheva, a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty journalist. . . .

Russian authorities opened a new criminal case against Kurmasheva, a dual U.S.-Russian national, in December over a book she helped edit that criticizes the Russian invasion of Ukraine. She was eventually charged with spreading false information about Russiaā€™s military, before beingĀ abruptly convicted after a secret trialĀ and sentenced on July 19.

Kurmasheva has denied the charges against her through her lawyer and family. Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and her family say she was targeted because she is a journalist and U.S. citizen. . . .

Other freed Russians included a suspected intelligence officer who had been living undercover in Norwayā€™s Arctic north. Poland freed a Russian-born Spanish journalist charged with espionage. The U.S. freed a Russian businessman convicted of stealing millions from U.S. companies. . . .

From The Wall Street Journal.

We thank God for the return of these political prisoners and note the signs of the times in U.S./Russia relationsĀ  . . .

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Rose Rocha
August 2, 2024

I pray that when human lives are concerned that no political leaders should use it as a ploy to be elected. It is about doing the righteous thing for God’s pursues. May God get the glory.

3
A T
August 2, 2024

Thanks to the work of President Biden.

Christy
August 1, 2024

Because it’s an election year ans Russian is afraid of Trump. Biden try to buy votes for the Dems.

6

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