John Kirby: Griner swap ‘was the only deal we could get and now was the only moment we could get it’
White House National Security Council Communications Coordinator John Kirby joins Andrea Mitchell following the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner from Russian captivity in a prisoner swap for convicted Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, a deal that did not include wrongfully detained former Marine Paul Whelan. “The deal that we got with Miss Griner was the only deal we could get, and now was the only moment we could get it. So we took advantage of that to get one American home,” Kirby explains. “We are going to continue to have, as we do now have, conversations with the Russians about Mr. Whelan, and those are going to continue to go on as for as long as they have to until we get a successful outcome, until we can get him home.” He adds, “It’s a bittersweet day for sure.”
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
The Last Thing: My three sons
MSNBC -
Two more Memphis officers “relieved of duty”
MSNBC -
TN State Sen.: Police unit behind Tyre Nichols' death lacked oversight
MSNBC -
Retired commissioner: 40% of Memphis budget goes into policing, recruiting young officers
MSNBC -
Grand jury convened in Trump hush money probe
MSNBC -
Matt Gaetz to MSNBC: There was a side deal but I lost my copy
MSNBC -
Matt Gaetz condemns Jan 6 violence, denies Trump W.H. pardon testimony/ MSNBC
MSNBC -
NYT: Police gave Tyre Nichols 71 conflicting commands, impossible orders
MSNBC -
Chris Hayes: The right's 'campaign of lies' about the Pelosi attack
MSNBC -
Unpacking police reform legislation and classified documents investigations
MSNBC -
Discussing how race factors into the police reform debate
MSNBC -
Iranian journalist Masih Alinejad: 'My weapon is my voice'
MSNBC -
Michael Cohen: Donald will ultimately be held accountable for Stormy Daniels payment
MSNBC -
TikTok CEO to testify at House hearing in March
MSNBC -
New doc follows story of Watergate whistleblower Martha Mitchell
MSNBC -
Charges against officers brought 'extraordinarily quickly', says district attorney
MSNBC