Leonid Bershidsky, Columnist

Ukraine and Russia Are Finally Ready to Talk Peace

A long-awaited prisoner exchange showed that they want to make a deal on elections in the Donbas region.

Let’s make a deal?

Photographer: Yuri Kadobnov/AFP/Getty Images

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Russia and Ukraine finally made a major exchange of prisoners on Saturday, and two names on the list make it clear that the trade sets up substantive negotiations on the future of eastern Ukraine.

Pro-Russian separatists, who hold a substantial part of eastern Ukraine (also known as the Donbas), have been battling the Kyiv government for more than five years. The two sides traded 35 prisoners each; their reception in the two countries on Saturday couldn’t have been more different. The Ukrainians were met at the Kyiv airport by an emotional crowd of relatives and journalists – and by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, whose bodyguards were pushed aside during the chaotic scene. In Moscow, Ukraine’s former prisoners, of whom 13 were Ukrainian citizens and the rest Russians, were bused away without ceremony; some of them face months of intelligence debriefings.