Trump announces U.S. role in freeing five prisoners held by Belarus and Russia

 May 12, 2026

President Donald Trump announced Sunday that five prisoners from Poland and Moldova had been released from detention in Belarus and Russia, crediting American diplomatic pressure and thanking Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko for his cooperation in a deal that freed a jailed Polish journalist who had spent years behind bars.

The release of the five detainees marks the latest in a growing string of prisoner recoveries tied to the Trump administration's direct engagement with authoritarian governments, a pattern that has drawn praise from allied nations and sharp attention from foreign-policy observers tracking Washington's willingness to deal with difficult regimes.

Among those freed: Andrzej Poczobut, a Polish journalist and activist who had been serving an eight-year sentence in Belarus after his arrest in 2021 for reporting on pro-democracy protests. Poczobut, a correspondent for the Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza and a prominent member of Belarus' Polish minority, had been awarded the Sakharov Prize, the European Union's top human rights honor, while imprisoned. Also released was Grzegorz Gawel, a Roman Catholic friar from the Carmelite order in Krakow, Fox News Digital reported.

Trump credits envoy, Polish president for deal

Trump laid out the backstory of the deal in a series of posts on Truth Social. He said Polish President Karol Nawrocki had personally asked him for help during a meeting last September.

"My friend, President Karol Nawrocki of Poland, met with me last September and asked me to help secure Andrzej Poczobut from Belarusian prison."

Trump credited Special Presidential Envoy John Coale for pushing the negotiations forward.

"Thanks to my Special Presidential Envoy, John Coale, we were able to push hard to make this release happen."

The president declared the outcome a win for American alliances, writing: "Today, Poczobut is free due to our efforts. The United States delivers for our Allies and Friends." He also extended a direct thank-you to Lukashenko: "Thank you to President Aleksandr Lukashenko for his cooperation and friendship. So nice!"

That public acknowledgment of Lukashenko, a leader who has faced repeated Western sanctions over human rights abuses and who allowed Russian forces to stage from Belarusian territory during the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, will inevitably draw scrutiny. But the administration's approach appears rooted in a transactional logic: deal with the people who hold the prisoners, get the prisoners home, and let the results speak for themselves.

The broader diplomatic posture mirrors Trump's recent high-profile engagement with Russia over a potential Ukraine cease-fire, where direct communication with adversaries has been the operating method rather than the exception.

A multi-country arrangement

A spokesperson for Poland's Foreign Ministry described the deal as a multi-country arrangement. Three individuals were transferred from Belarus to Poland in exchange for three sent in the opposite direction, with others released through separate agreements. Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski called Poczobut both a symbol of the fight for freedom in Belarus and an example of Poland's commitment to securing the return of its citizens.

Polish officials also said one of those freed was a Belarusian national who had worked with Polish intelligence services, a detail that hints at the complexity and sensitivity of the negotiations behind the scenes.

The identities of all five released prisoners have not been fully disclosed. Trump said three were Polish and two were Moldovan, but beyond Poczobut and Gawel, the remaining names have not been publicly confirmed.

Broader pattern of prisoner releases under Trump

Sunday's announcement fits into a wider series of detainee recoveries that the administration has pursued since Trump took office. Earlier this year, Lukashenko authorized the release of 250 political prisoners under an agreement with Washington that led to a partial easing of U.S. sanctions, a move that signaled a potential opening for limited cooperation between Washington and Minsk despite years of hostility.

The Washington Examiner reported that the Trump administration had begun lifting sanctions on Belarusian potash exports, a key revenue source for the Lukashenko regime, as part of renewed U.S.-Belarus engagement. That move preceded Belarus freeing 123 political prisoners, including one U.S. citizen, six citizens of U.S. allies, and five Ukrainians. A U.S. official described the release as "a significant milestone in U.S.-Belarus engagement" and said the administration "stands ready for additional engagement with Belarus that advances U.S. interests."

More than 1,000 political prisoners reportedly remain jailed in Belarus.

Separately, the New York Post reported that the Trump administration had previously announced the release of three prisoners from Belarus, including an American who chose to remain anonymous. The other two were identified as Andrei Kuznechyk and Alena Maushuk. U.S. Ambassador to Lithuania Kara McDonald said all three were transferred to Lithuania. That announcement came one day after Russia released Pennsylvania teacher Marc Fogel, linking the Belarus releases to a broader chain of prisoner recoveries.

The administration's willingness to engage directly with regimes that many in Washington have long treated as untouchable represents a clear departure from the approach of the Biden years, when hostage diplomacy often moved slowly and prisoner cases languished. The Trump team's posture, deal first, lecture later, has produced tangible results for detained Americans and allied nationals alike.

This transactional approach to foreign policy has also been visible in Trump's recent negotiations with Iran, where the president has used pressure and direct engagement in tandem to extract concessions.

Lukashenko's calculation

Independent analyst Valery Karbalevich offered a blunt assessment of Lukashenko's motives. AP News reported Karbalevich's view that Lukashenko "is sending clear signals to the Trump administration about his desire to start bargaining for lifting the sanctions in exchange for the release of political prisoners."

Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya thanked Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio for the earlier round of releases, citing "the joint efforts that have made it possible." That a leading opposition figure, someone who has spent years in exile fighting Lukashenko's grip on power, would credit the Trump administration speaks to the practical weight of the results.

Lukashenko has been in power for more than three decades. His regime has faced sanctions from both the United States and the European Union over human rights abuses and his role in facilitating Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The question now is whether continued prisoner releases will lead to broader diplomatic normalization, and at what cost.

The administration's expanding diplomatic footprint extends well beyond Eastern Europe. Trump has signaled Cuba as a next priority in his geopolitical agenda, suggesting the same willingness to engage authoritarian governments where American interests are at stake.

What remains unanswered

Several questions linger. The Fox News headline referenced the release of "an American" alongside others, but the body of the reporting focused on Polish and Moldovan prisoners. The relationship between the American referenced in the headline and the five prisoners Trump described remains unclear from the available details.

The exact terms of the exchange, what Belarus and Russia received in return, beyond the three individuals transferred from Poland to Belarus, have not been fully spelled out. Nor is it clear which detainees were held in Belarus and which were held in Russia.

Meanwhile, the administration has been managing a full slate of personnel and policy decisions at home. Trump recently weighed changes to key Cabinet positions, underscoring the pace of activity across both domestic and foreign-policy fronts.

What is clear: five people who were locked in authoritarian prisons are now free. A Polish journalist who spent years behind bars for covering pro-democracy protests is out. A Catholic friar is out. And the diplomatic channel that produced those results runs through Washington.

Critics can debate the wisdom of thanking Lukashenko. But the families of the freed aren't debating anything. They're just glad someone picked up the phone.

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