Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Putin on release of Evan Gershkovich: ‘I believe an agreement can be reached’

Former “Fox News” host Tucker Carlson spoke with Russia’s leader via X.

Evan Gershkovich
Evan Gershkovich. Source: Twitter.

In an interview by conservative political commentator Tucker Carlson, Russian President Vladimir Putin insisted that Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich had engaged in espionage, but a deal could potentially be reached for his release.

The Jewish reporter has been detained in Russia since March.

The two-hour interview streamed via X on Feb. 8 has been criticized for giving Putin a platform where he dominated the conversation and spread propaganda, according to critics. Carlson, 54, was fired last year from Fox News, where he worked since 2016.

As far as Gershkovich goes, the Russian president stated that “there are certain terms being discussed via special services channels. I believe an agreement can be reached.”

He claimed that the 32-year-old reporter had been “caught red-handed” in the process of “secretly getting confidential information.”

The Russian government has not disclosed evidence of Gershkovich’s guilt. Gershkovich, his employer and the U.S. government insist on his innocence.

Carlson’s interview with Putin was the first by a Western journalist since the start of Russia’s war on Ukraine in February 2022.

Israeli airstrikes destroyed a launcher after projectiles were fired at troops, and forces also struck a suspicious vehicle in the area, the IDF said.
A pioneering project sends desalinated water into a once-dry Galilee wadi, offering a glimpse of how Israel turned chronic scarcity into abundance.
“Without me, there would be no Israel,” U.S. President Donald Trump said at the G7 summit in France.
“It is a big problem if she is making these kinds of statements while officially representing the E.U. on the world stage,” said one E.U. diplomat.
The U.S. president told reporters that he intends to read his agreement with the Iranian regime “word by word” publicly to set the record straight.
“When you have something saying you can’t go to someone who uses divination, or a witch, or consults spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer, that means this is something people were doing,” Eddy Portnoy, the curator, told JNS.