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Le Monde
Le Monde
10 Apr 2025


Images Le Monde.fr

The United States on Thursday, April 10, exchanged a sanctions-busting suspect for a ballet dancer held by Russia, the second swap under President Donald Trump as Moscow and Washington push to rebuild ties.

Moscow released a Los Angeles-based ballet dancer convicted in Russia of "treason" over a one-time donation worth around $50 to a pro-Ukraine charity. Ksenia Karelina holds dual US-Russian nationality. Washington released Arthur Petrov, a Russian-German national accused of illegally exporting US-made electronics to manufacturers supplying the Russian military.

The exchange took place at an airport in Abu Dhabi, where a dozen people wearing suits were present, video posted by Russia's FSB security service showed. Trump has sought to reset ties with Moscow since taking office, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine three years ago plunged bilateral relations to their lowest point since the Cold War.

"American Ksenia Karelina is on a plane back home to the United States," US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote on X. "She was wrongfully detained by Russia for over a year." Trump will "continue to work for the release of ALL Americans," Rubio added.

The FSB video showed Petrov seated on a plane after he was freed, telling an unseen interviewer that he had not slept for two days but otherwise had no complaints. Petrov, arrested in Cyprus in 2023 and extradited to the United States, was facing 20 years in a US jail for violating export controls.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe was the key negotiator for the swap, working with Russian intelligence and foreign partners, the CIA said. Ratcliffe in a statement thanked the UAE "for enabling this exchange." "While we are disappointed that other Americans remain wrongfully detained in Russia, we see this exchange as a positive step and will continue to work for their release," a CIA spokesperson said.

Asked about the exchange in a daily briefing with reporters, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment. Russian and US officials have held several meetings since Trump took office in January.

As the prisoner swap took place, delegations from the two sides were holding talks in Istanbul on restoring embassy staffing levels after years of diplomat expulsions. The State Department said after the meeting that Washington renewed concern about rules that prohibit local staff from working for US missions in Russia. The two sides also moved to formalize an agreement on banking access for their diplomats, despite the US sanctions on Russia, the State Department said.

Le Monde with AFP