President Joe Biden celebrated the end of the ‘brutal ordeal’ for Americans ‘imprisoned unjustly’ inside Russia as he announced a complex prisoner swap and then led a rendition of ‘happy birthday’ to the teen daughter of a freed prisoner.
Biden made a surprise appearance inside the State Dining Room at the White House hours after the deal that freed American ex-Marine Paul Whelan and Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.
All were held inside Russia, Whelan since 2018, for ‘no legitimate reason whatsoever – none,’ Biden said. ‘And now they’re brutal ordeal is over and they’re free.
He appeared with family members of freed Americans as he announced the intricate swap that freed 24 prisoners and involved seven countries.
Biden, who hasn’t been seen publicly since early Tuesday, hailed the ‘feat of diplomacy’ and friendship involving multiple nations. In one awkward moment, he led the room in a round of ‘Happy Birthday’ for Miriam Butorin, the 13-year old daughter of Alsu Kurmasheva, a freed Russian-American journalist with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
Biden interrupted his remarks to bring Butorin in close, then encouraged people to join in singing, calling it a Biden family tradition.
And he offered her some life and future dating advice while the cameras rolled.
‘Remember, no serious guys until you’re 30,’ he told her.
Responding to a question from DailyMail.com, the president also defended the release of convicted hit man Vladimir Krasikov, who was serving time in Germany a mid-day assassination of a Georgian national.
Asked how he weighed the decision, Biden responded: ‘I got home innocent people.’
Biden positioned family members behind him for the event, where he read from prepared remarks and took a series of questions from the press, at a time when the White House says he is ‘recalibrating’ his role now that he isn’t seeking reelection.
‘They never gave up hope. I can’t imagine what they’ve been through,’ he said.
He invoked his own late son Beau as he tried to describe what they grappled with. ‘Family is the beginning, the middle, and the end,’ he said.
The president said it ‘says a lot’ about American values that the U.S. also pushed for the release of Russian dissidents being held inside their country. He said they would not be free to ‘live safely abroad’ and said they would be able to continue working to promote democracy in Russia ‘if they so choose.’
Biden focused many of his remarks on the freed Americans, who also included Vladimir Kara-Murza, a journalist and Russian-British dissident also part of the swap.
He referred to the quartet by the first names.