The negotiations carried out by the FSB and CIA and potential peace talks with Kiev are completely separate issues, according to Moscow
The prisoner swap between Russia and the West carried out in Türkiye on Thursday has no direct implications for the Ukraine conflict, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Friday.
Peskov was asked at a media briefing if the exchange, the largest since the Cold War, could be seen as a sign that Russia is willing to compromise in order to achieve peace in the conflict. The work done by Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) and the CIA in arranging the exchange required “very complex negotiations,” he explained.
However, the issue of Ukraine, as well as other more complex international problems, are a “completely different matter” and concern other principles, such as Russia’s national interests and security, Peskov emphasized, noting that the work on Ukraine is being carried out in a “slightly different regime.”
While Peskov stressed that “the internal workings” of the FSB-CIA negotiations “cannot be made public,” he nevertheless shared some details about how the actual prisoner exchange played out.
One interesting fact that Peskov mentioned was that the two children of the Russian undercover agents Artem and Anna Dultsev, who returned to their homeland after being arrested in Slovenia in 2022, were not even aware that they are Russian and found out only when their plane took off from Ankara towards Moscow.
“You may have noticed that when the children were getting off the plane, they didn’t speak any Russian. [President Vladimir] Putin welcomed them in Spanish, telling them ‘buenas noches,” Peskov recalled, noting that these children did not even know who Putin is.
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West and Russia conduct largest prisoner swap since Cold War: As it happened
The Kremlin spokesperson also commented on the return of Vadim Krasikov, an FSB agent who was convicted of the murder of a former Chechen militant commander in Germany in 2021. Peskov said that Krasikov had previously served in the Alpha Group special operations force along with several of Putin’s current personal security guards. “Of course, they all know each other and they greeted each other yesterday when they saw each other,” Peskov said.
Putin personally traveled to the Vnukovo-2 airport outside Moscow with several other top officials to greet those who had been released from Western incarceration.
Overall, the exchange involved 26 individuals, including eight Russian nationals and two minors who were returned to Russia and 16 Western and Russian citizens who were delivered to the West, including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, former US Marine Paul Whelan, Russian-American journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, who had worked for the US state-funded outlet RFE/RL, and British-Russian citizen and opposition figure Vladimir Kara-Murza.