The story behind the dramatic exchange was told in Steven Spielberg’s 2015 historical drama “Bridge of Spies.”

Another exchange saw Nicholas Daniloff, an American journalist who was imprisoned in Moscow in 1986, released that same year in a swap with Soviet physicist Gennadi Zakharov, who had been arrested on espionage charges in New York.

Chapman, top row, center, was one of ten Russians arrested by the FBI in 2010 on espionage charges.
Chapman, top row, center, was one of ten Russians arrested by the FBI in 2010 on espionage charges.US Marshals / AP

The largest U.S.-Russian spy swap since the Cold War came in 2010 when 10 Russian agents, including Anna Chapman, were exchanged for four Russians accused of spying for the West — among them Sergei Skripal, who was later poisoned with a nerve agent in the United Kingdom. The British government blamed Moscow for the poisoning, which it has denied.U.S.-Russia relations have spiraled over the war in Ukraine, and as the conflict marches toward a one-year anniversary in February, Smith said Griner’s release would suggest the two countries are “interested in managing the nature and extent of the conflict” in order to “prevent it from escalating to dangerous levels.”

Still, Thursday’s prisoner swap comes at a time when Biden has said himself that the nuclear threat is at its highest in decades.

Biden offered a candid warning in October that the risk of nuclear “Armageddon” was the highest it has been for 60 years after Russian President Vladimir Putin issued renewed threats.

Speaking at a reception for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Biden said it was the first time since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis that there has been a “direct threat” of nuclear weapons being used, “if, in fact, things continue down the path they are going.”

“We have not faced the prospect of Armageddon since Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” he said at the time.

Putin has repeatedly used the threat of nuclear weapons throughout his presidency, and has renewed those threats as his military struggles in Ukraine. On Wednesday, the Russian leader said his nuclear arsenal was in fact deterring escalation of the war.

Viktor Bout
Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, dubbed the “Merchant of Death,” sits inside a detention center in Bangkok on May 19, 2009.Apichart Weerawong / AP file

Asked to pledge that Russia would not be the first to use such weapons, Putin suggested Moscow would not be able to use them at all if it agreed not to use them first and then came under a nuclear strike.

Washington and Moscow have still been able to meet amid the threats, however. In mid-November, talks took place between the U.S. and Russia in Ankara, with a spokesperson for the White House’s National Security Council confirming reports that CIA Director William Burns was in the Turkish capital for talks with his Russian counterpart.

Smith said a prisoner swap potentially “tells us something about the willingness of Russia and the United States to sit down and at some point, not necessarily immediately, but at some point, to talk about other issues” pertaining to the war in Ukraine.

Moscow and Kyiv have already themselves carried out a number of prisoner swaps, including this week. On Tuesday, the two countries said they had exchanged 60 prisoners of war on each side in the latest deal, according to Reuters.

Griner’s family and supporters will be celebrating her return, but attention will now turn to whether a similar agreement will be negotiated to secure the release of Paul Whelan, a corporate security executive who remains jailed in Russia.

The Biden administration had hoped to secure a deal that would see both Griner and Whelan, who is serving a 16-year prison sentence after being accused of spying, a charge the U.S. has denied, freed.


Yuliya Talmazan contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

Spotify Plans to Raise Price of Premium Plan in U.S.

What to Read Next This post first appeared on wsj.com

CNN Taps Former New York Times Chief Thompson to Lead Network

.css-dg1ipl-ReadNextStrap{max-width:780px;width:100%;text-transform:capitalize;border-bottom:1px solid #111111;}.css-1llpedq-ReadNextStrap{max-width:780px;width:100%;text-transform:capitalize;border-bottom:1px solid #111111;}@media screen and (max-width: 639px){.css-1llpedq-ReadNextStrap{padding-block-start:28px;padding-block-end:6px;}}@media screen and (min-width:…

The Backyard Golf Course Can Be More Than a Dream

Take Waterfalling Estate, on the Big Island of Hawaii, owned by a…

The FBI has still not spoken to key witnesses a year after the killing of a Palestinian-American journalist

JERUSALEM — One year after the killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen…