President Joe Biden called on Russia to "release her immediately" after Brittney Griner was sentenced to nine years in a Russian prison.
"Today, American citizen Brittney Griner received a prison sentence that is one more reminder of what the world already knew: Russia is wrongfully detaining Brittney," Biden said in a statement shared Thursday, moments after a Russian judge handed down her sentence.
"It's unacceptable, and I call on Russia to release her immediately so she can be with her wife, loved ones, friends, and teammates," he continued.
The WNBA superstar and two-time Olympic gold medalist was found guilty of drug-smuggling charges after customs agents at a Moscow airport found vape cartridges containing hashish oil in her luggage back in February. She has been detained ever since.
Legal expert Aron Solomon, who acts as the Head of Strategy for Esquire Digital, told Insider that Biden's near-instant statement was unsurprising, as "he knew this [verdict] was coming."
"If we look at the totality of this case so far as a chess match, it was a move cause by the other player's move," Solomon said of Biden's words. "It doesn't do anything in itself, but not calling for Griner's immediate release would have again left the administration open to a valid argument that they aren't moving quickly enough."
Last week, news broke that the Biden Administration offered to swap convicted arms dealer Viktor Bout in exchange for the early release of both Griner and Paul Whelan, another American detainee in Russia.
Biden alluded to such a deal in his statement Thursday.
"My administration will continue to work tirelessly and pursue every possible avenue to bring Brittney and Paul Whelan home safely as soon as possible," he said.
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Russia has yet to officially respond to the White House's proposal but has suggested that they are interested in the swap if the US helps to free an additional convict — a Russian national who was tried, sentenced, and imprisoned for murder in Germany.
John Kirby, the Biden administration's National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications, slammed Russia's counter as "a bad faith attempt to avoid a very serious offer and proposal that the United States has put forward."
Moscow officials fired back that "loudspeaker diplomacy" wouldn't succeed in bringing the detained Americans home, signaling that the US and Russia were still quite far from agreeing to a deal.
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