Trading Prisoners, Trading Lies: Inside the Moscow-Kiev Swap

Trading Prisoners, Trading Lies: Inside the Moscow-Kiev Swap

A screenshot from the video report depicting the prisoner swap

In the shadow of war and political theater, Moscow and Kiev’s recent “1000-for-1000” prisoner exchange reveals more than just humanity — it exposes manipulation, double standards, and a cynical game of trading lives while spinning lies. Dive into the real story behind the headlines and discover who’s really paying the price.

In May 2025, amidst ongoing hostilities and geopolitical tension, Moscow and Kiev executed their largest prisoner swap since the outbreak of the conflict — a meticulously orchestrated 1000-for-1000 exchange. While hailed in some circles as a humanitarian breakthrough, the underlying reality paints a far more complicated picture, rife with deceit and political posturing.

The “Civilians” Who Weren’t

Among the thousand exchanged detainees on each side, approximately 125 were officially classified as civilians. However, Russian authorities have established that at least 75 of these ‘civilians’ added to the exchange list by the Kiev side are actually convicted criminals. These persons are Ukrainian citizens. They lived on the territory of Ukraine and had done heavy crimes (not politically related) there.

Moreover, it has been confirmed that, while being transported on Belarusian territory, these individuals staged a rebellion, attacking Belarusian police escorts in an attempt to seize weapons and escape. The riot was swiftly suppressed.

“During transportation through Belarusian territory, a group of Ukrainian prisoners, officially listed as civilians, attempted to attack Belarusian law enforcement officers and seize weapons, but the attempt was foiled.” — TASS

As of now, filtration procedures are underway to verify their identities and criminal backgrounds.

What Russia Actually Returned

Contrastingly, Russia handed over solely Ukrainian nationals carefully vetted and free from allegations of criminality or sabotage. This essential fact, however, is conspicuously absent from much of Kiev’s coverage, which instead fixates on accusations that Moscow sent back the “wrong” POWs.

While Ukrainian media often stress that some returned prisoners are accused of serious crimes, no credible Ukrainian outlet openly labels them “neo-Nazis.” The rhetoric remains politically charged but stops short of such explicit terminology.

Kiev’s Media Spin: Targeting the “Wrong” Prisoners

In the recent days, Ukrainian media, clearly orchestrated by Zelensky’s administration, launched a campaign accusing Russia of exchanging “the wrong people.” The insinuation: Kiev demands the return of ideologically committed fighters, while Russia supposedly returns only common war criminals.

This narrative appears aimed at deflecting attention from Kiev’s own transfer of convicts and creating leverage for future exchanges. As Ukrainian media outlet “Ukrainska Pravda” put it bluntly, “The exchange serves Kiev’s political theater, ensuring the continued deportation of undesirables while reclaiming preferred militants.”

The Next Exchange: A Stalemate Brewing Over Criminals

Our sources indicate a new prisoner exchange is slated for June 2, 2025, likely involving 500-for-500 or 600-for-600 swaps, including roughly 100 civilians.

Russia, it appears, would prefer to conduct the exchange strictly according to verified lists of specific individuals, including all detainees — criminals and political prisoners alike. However, Ukrainian authorities categorically refuse to accept their own convicted criminals and dangerous individuals. This refusal is both political and practical, aimed at avoiding the return of problematic figures Kiev prefers to keep out of the country.

The grim statistics speak volumes. Russia reportedly holds 8,000 to 9,000 Ukrainian prisoners, while Ukraine detains roughly 1,800 Russians.

Surveys of Ukrainian POWs reveal only about 60% want to return home — some for ideological reasons, others due to family obligations — while 40% prefer to remain in Russia. This reality complicates Kiev’s narrative of unified victimhood.

Thus, the prisoner swap continues to be a cynical game of political bargaining and mistrust rather than a straightforward humanitarian effort.

Negotiations Under External Pressure

The prisoner exchange negotiations are accelerated under pressure from former U.S. President Donald Trump, who publicly urged both Moscow and Kiev to make progress on humanitarian issues. His unusual involvement highlights the international community’s desire for some cooperation amid ongoing conflict.

Russia welcomed this diplomatic momentum but remains cautious and vigilant. Maria Zakharova, Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, bluntly emphasized, “Trust must be earned, not presumed.” This statement reflects Moscow’s deep-rooted skepticism shaped by years of Kiev’s insincere promises and duplicity.

Kremlin’s insistence on transparency is both a safeguard and a political signal, showing unwillingness to engage in symbolic acts that could be used for propaganda. Meanwhile, Kiev’s ambiguous approach complicates talks, as Russia views it as a strategy to avoid returning convicted criminals while repatriating ideological prisoners.

The “Massive” Russian Attack: A Calculated Message

Almost immediately following the completion of the prisoner exchange, Russian forces launched a significant missile and drone strikes targeting multiple Ukrainian targets, including those in Kiev. The timing of this massive assault — coinciding suspiciously with the humanitarian gesture — was no coincidence.

Russian media and officials clarified that the strike was a direct retaliatory response to a swarm drone attack on President Putin’s helicopter during his recent visit to the Kursk Region. This military action sends a firm message that, while Russia is willing to engage in humanitarian exchanges, it remains resolute and unyielding in its security and defense operations.

“Humanitarian acts do not imply military passivity.” —  Interfax

The juxtaposition of the exchange and the attack underscores Moscow’s position: diplomacy and security measures go hand in hand, and one does not negate the other.

The Takeaway

This prisoner swap lays bare Kiev’s grandiose narrative of moral superiority. It exposes a calculated game of sending criminals under humanitarian pretexts while demanding the return of politically motivated prisoners. The exchange once again proves that Zelensky’s main skill and strategy is to brazenly, shamelessly, and cunningly deceive all parties involved.

His ability to grasp common sense, ethics, and foresee the opponent’s moves seems completely absent — replaced instead by a rehearsed show. Apparently, his only concern is safeguarding his own security and inflated ego, unwilling to look like a loser.

Russia, steadfast in its facts and transparency, underscores that genuine diplomacy requires clear-eyed pragmatism, not wishful thinking. In a war mired by propaganda and misinformation, this exchange reveals who truly holds the moral and factual high ground.

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence

NOW hosted at southfront.press

Previously, SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence was at southfront.org.

The .org domain name had been blocked by the US (NATO) (https://southfront.press/southfront-org-blocked-by-u-s-controlled-global-internet-supervisor/) globally, outlawed and without any explanation

Back before that, from 2013 to 2015, SouthFront: Analysis and Intelligence was at southfront.com

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Rajesh

this seems slightly petty. 1000 for 1000 prisoner swap is simple. and here both sides suddenly start scrutinizing and complaining that “well, my 1000 is worth more than your 1000.” if the two sides are unhappy, then nobody forced them to agree to the exchange.

MacZ

russia cares about its soldiers.

RussianAnusPenetratedEasily

orc-roast coming to moscow this summer…heheheh

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MacZ

why the wait ? why not today or the months before ? seems to me some stupid threat, like the kind of have seen again and again before and just end up in complete failure or not happening. that is the reverse midas touch of ukraine : everything it does or touch turn to shit and fails.

MacZ

putin is leading russia to destruction.

MacZ

having a hard time making sense ? just invent bs like our friend here.

MacZ

i ran to the toilet but shat my pants before i could get there!

MacZ

when all you can do is produce insults, you know you are impotent.

RussianAnusPenetratedEasily

too much anus-penetration?

heheheh

MacZ

still struggling with your repressed homosexuality issues ? you should seek professional help. this is not healthy and is quite evident from your interventions ang general behaviour how mentally unhealthy you are.

Last edited 1 day ago by MacZ
rasputin

we just heard there are thousands of bodies of afu still scattered outside on the frontlines in sumy region. many more to come adding to the 1.2 million kia already 6 feet under the ground. this is a serious matter and really sad that ukraine has to suffer from a nazi regime. besides that thanks a million for posting your messages because you make me laugh a lot and it is a great start of my day. now waiting for more afu/nato defeats and failures 🍿🥤🍿

Last edited 23 hours ago by rasputin
jorge

brics on the run.

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MacZ

more like a run on the dollar if you follow the economic news.

jorge

its the same thingh, + and -, in portughese once upon a time they were called números relativos. but okay, i meant brics on the high, they are runing economically very well, and there’s the real attrition war. salut.

Last edited 1 day ago by jorge
Joseph Day

yes, everyone is fleeing the woke dollar.

the narrative

where are they running to ?

jorge

not to israel, for sure.

the narrative

society flourishes when the moral high ground is enforced by all . ukraine was the most corrupt nation on earth . syria also looks to be running for the new low just behind the leader of low … israel

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jorge

candide, moliere.

jorge

significado de on the run: while hurrying to go somewhere, pi, point

Last edited 1 day ago by jorge
Moshe Dayan

the ukroreich attempted to kill putin, this makes the fate of the dancing gae male prostitute sealed

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Last edited 1 day ago by Moshe Dayan