Whelan, Gershkovich, Putin only ‘winners’ in swap: Ex-FBI agent

(NewsNation) — A large prisoner swap involving two Americans imprisoned on espionage convictions in Russia is underway, according to the White House.

Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and retired U.S. Marine Paul Whelan are expected to soon be in U.S. custody after spending 16 months and more than 5 1/2 years, respectively, behind bars in Russia.

Former FBI agent Robin Dreeke told “NewsNation Live” on Thursday that there are only really three “winners” in this situation.

“Make no mistake about this, there’s only really three winners: The two families that get their loved ones back and Putin,” he said. “Putin’s modus operandi for as long as he’s been in power … is really simple, Fear is cheaper than diplomacy.”

Meanwhile, there is some concern regarding risk-reward in a swap such as this. However, John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United, said he doesn’t think it’s a risk-reward trade-off.

“I think its illegitimate to swap innocent Americans for Russians who may include a KGB agent in Germany convicted of murder, among other things,” he said. “The price for Americas is high; every time you make a deal like this the price gets higher.”

He added that the U.S. shouldn’t want to engage in conduct that may “spring some Americans now but more Americans in danger in the future.

“I think when the Russians or the Chinese or the North Koreans or the Iranians or any terrorist group take Americans, they ought to feel terrible pain for it and we should inflict that pain. But you incentive them to kidnap more Americans when you make hostage swaps like this,” Bolton said.

Speculation about the swap began Tuesday when many of the prisoners were being moved from their holding cells and transferred.

Details of who the U.S. may be sending back to Russia, or who else may have been freed, are not yet known. A Turkish intelligence agency said it was coordinating the extensive prisoner swap Thursday at Ankara Esenboga Airport, Reuters reported.

The largest prisoner swap since the Cold War took place in 2010, involving 14 people in total. 

NewsNation’s Devan MarkhamDamita Menezes and Kellie Meyer contributed to this report.

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Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom was captured on video laughing Wednesday while listening to President Donald Trump’s speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

During his speech, which lasted over an hour and saw him confuse Iceland with Greenland, Trump lavished praise on his own administration for the “help” it provided the city of Los Angeles last year, referring to his immigration raids that saw state leaders declare a state of emergency.

“We’re gonna help the people in California, we want to have no crime. I know Gavin was here – I used to get along so great with Gavin when I was president, Gavin’s a good guy,” Trump said, as C-SPAN footage showed Newsom listening near the back of the large auditorium.

“If he needed it, I would do it in a heartbeat, we did help them a lot in Los Angeles. If I were a Democrat governor, I would call up Trump, I’d say ‘come on in, make us look good,’ because we’re cutting crime down to nothing!”

Following Trump’s remarks about “cutting crime down to nothing,” Newsom could be seen cracking a large smile and laughing, shaking his head while standing near the back of the room.

Newsom’s relationship with Trump has been openly hostile during Trump’s second term, with the governor’s press office frequently mocking the president over his chaotic tenure, and accusing him of trying to “distract from the Epstein files” – a reference to the Justice Department’s unreleased trove of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein that, by law, were required to be released in full by Dec. 19.