Tucker Carlson urges Putin to release American journalist

FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin attends his annual news conference in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023. Russian President Vladimir Putin has been interviewed by former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, the Kremlin confirmed Wednesday. It is Putin's first interview to a Western journalist since the beginning of his full-scale invasion of Ukraine two years ago. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool, File)

In an interview released Thursday, Tucker Carlson urged President Vladimir Putin of Russia to release an American reporter for The Wall Street Journal who has been held in a notorious Moscow prison for nearly a year.

Carlson’s appeal on behalf of the reporter, Evan Gershkovich, was only the second time that Putin directly addressed a case that has galvanized press freedom groups and strained diplomatic relations with the United States.

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Large portions of the two-hour interview were taken up by Putin’s recounting hundreds of years of Russian history. But in the final minutes, Carlson asked, “as a sign of your decency,” if he “would be willing to release him to us and we’ll bring him back to the United States.” Carlson added: “This guy’s obviously not a spy. He’s a kid, and maybe he was breaking your law in some way, but he’s not a superspy, and everybody knows that.”

Putin was noncommittal in his response. “We have done so many gestures of goodwill out of decency that I think we have run out of them,” he said, according to a translation of his remarks by Carlson’s team.

Pressed about the case by Carlson, Putin later added: “I also want him to return to his homeland at last. I’m absolutely sincere. But let me say once again, the dialogue continues.”

The Russian leader suggested that he wanted additional concessions from U.S. officials before he would consider releasing Gershkovich. Putin suggested that he might be willing to trade the reporter for Vadim Krasikov, a Russian citizen sentenced to life in prison in Germany for the 2019 murder of a Chechen former separatist fighter in Berlin.

Gershkovich, 32, was the first American journalist to be arrested on a spying charge in Russia since the end of the Cold War, and the U.S. government has designated him as “wrongfully detained,” meaning he is essentially considered a political prisoner.

He was arrested in March in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg and accused of espionage, an allegation that the Journal and U.S. authorities have strenuously denied. Since then, he has been held at the notorious Lefortovo Prison in Moscow pending a trial.

In Thursday’s interview, Putin offered a similarly hazy answer to Carlson. “I do not rule out that the person you refer to, Mr. Gershkovich, may return to his motherland,” Putin said. “But we have to come to an agreement.

“I hope you let him out,” Carlson replied.

© 2024 The New York Times Company

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