-
US leads international concern after China test-fires missile into Pacific
-
Samsung expects 1,800% leap in quarterly operating profit on AI boom
-
Close to tears and on his own as Ronaldo's World Cup dream ends
-
Russian strikes kill at least 26 in Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
-
Argentina's gruelling World Cup schedule a concern for Scaloni
-
Ronaldo 'won't make rash decisions' following last World Cup game
-
Race to recover bodies ahead of Venezuela quake cleanup
-
Paraguay govt slams lawmaker for racially abusing France's Mbappe
-
Egypt coach Hassan says Palestinian suffering 'a shame on the world'
-
US embraces Balogun World Cup reprieve as world seethes
-
NBA Kings waive six-time All-Star forward DeRozan
-
Spain win it late to give Ronaldo bitter end to World Cup career
-
Greaves and Hope centuries usher West Indies towards safety
-
Spain edge Portugal to end Ronaldo World Cup dream, US eye quarters
-
'I celebrated in bed' -- Norway's Solbakken stays grounded after beating Brazil
-
Spain win it late to bid farewell to Ronaldo at World Cup
-
Canada chooses Germany's TKMS to build new fleet of submarines
-
Trump's fireworks made Washington world's most polluted city
-
Mbappe condemns racist abuse by Paraguayan senator after World Cup clash
-
Stock markets meander as US tech stocks climb
-
FIFA chief forced to defend Balogun World Cup reprieve
-
Britain's Fery stuns Dimitrov, Paolini into Wimbledon quarters
-
Antetokounmpo says goodbye to Milwaukee in video
-
Russian strikes kill 24 in Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
-
Fairytale Fery sinks Dimitrov to make Grand Slam history at Wimbledon
-
Trump touts latest White House renovation: a new helipad
-
Canadian Artemis II crew member to retire from space agency
-
Fritz powers past Bublik, into Wimbledon last eight again
-
Prince Harry arrives in UK amid security spat
-
Ovechkin won't say next NHL season will be his last
-
'Agony' in Cuba amid third nationwide blackout in six months
-
Djokovic, Sinner aim to book Wimbledon blockbuster
-
For Trump's World Cup, 'America First' collides with world's game
-
Record fireworks display choked Washington in toxic smoke
-
England's World Cup campaign takes flight with Mexico win
-
Macron in Syria on first post-Assad visit by West European head of state
-
Tour de France stage record still 'far away' for Pogacar
-
US streamers launch new legal fight against French content rules
-
Infantino told Trump FIFA disciplinary body is 'independent'
-
EU tells France to amend social media ban law
-
Japanese forward Hachimura signs with Clippers: reports
-
Losses from latest French museum heist estimated at 4.5 mln euros
-
After designing Taylor Swift's wedding dress, Dior's Anderson returns to catwalk
-
Big defence spending, aid cuts: German cabinet approves budget
-
Russian strikes kill 22 in Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
-
Microsoft cuts 4,800 jobs as it revamps Xbox
-
Pogacar back in 'special' yellow after Tour de France stage three victory
-
Don't let AI shape humanity's future: UN chief
-
Paolini ends Eala run ahead of Wimbledon wildcard clash
-
Pogacar wins Tour de France 3rd stage, takes yellow
Viktor Bout: 'Merchant of death' arms smuggler
Former Soviet air force pilot Viktor Bout, who was swapped for US basketball star Brittney Griner on Thursday, fuelled some of the world's bloodiest conflicts by trafficking weapons across several continents.
In a career spanning two decades, and which stopped when he was sentenced to 25 years in a US prison in 2012, the 55-year-old Russian allegedly stoked violence from Sierra Leone to Afghanistan by bartering deals for planes and guns.
The mustachioed Bout, who is thought to speak six languages, travelled under various false names including "Boris" and "Vadim Markovich Aminov".
His notoriety inspired the Hollywood film "Lord of War", starring Nicolas Cage, in which the anti-hero escaped justice.
Expectations of a prisoner swap grew in recent months, after Russian leader Vladimir Putin and US President Joe Biden discussed his fate during a summit in Geneva in 2021.
CIA Director William Burns met with Sergei Naryshkin, head of Russia's SVR intelligence service, to discuss the swap involving Bout in Ankara last month, in what appeared to be the highest-level talks between Moscow and Washington since Russia sent troops to Ukraine in February.
- Sting operation -
Despite sanctions from the United States and United Nations, Bout had been trading weapons until he was caught in a sting operation in 2008 that was worthy of the silver screen.
The Russian was arrested at the five-star Sofitel hotel in Bangkok while negotiating with US agents posing as guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).
His appearances at court in Thailand, wearing a bullet-proof vest and shackles while flanked by armed police commandos, and the often tearful responses of his wife, Alla Bout, added to the drama of the case.
After a two-year legal battle, a Thai appeals court ruled in 2010 that he could be extradited to the United States, which accused him of running a "massive weapons-trafficking business" and terrorism.
Bout finally stood trial in the United States after he was flown out of Bangkok on a US government jet shortly after the Thai cabinet approved his extradition.
In 2012, a US judge sentenced Bout to 25 years in prison for conspiring to sell a massive arsenal to anti-American guerrillas in Colombia.
Bout maintained his innocence from the day he was picked up in the Thai capital after allegedly agreeing to supply surface-to-air missiles in a series of covert meetings that also took him to Denmark and Romania.
US prosecutors claim he agreed to the sale with the understanding that the weapons were to be used to attack United States helicopters.
- 'Unique creature' -
Former British foreign office minister Peter Hain dubbed him the "Merchant of Death", while Amnesty International has alleged that at one time he operated a fleet of more than 50 planes ferrying weapons around Africa.
Prosecutors in the United States said the arms he sold or brokered fuelled conflicts and supported regimes in Afghanistan, Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Sudan.
But Bout maintains that he has always run a legitimate air cargo business, and rejected claims of involvement with Al-Qaeda.
His detention enraged Russia, which called attempts at extradition politically motivated.
Born in Tajikistan's capital Dushanbe in 1967 when it was still under Soviet rule, Bout studied languages -- including English, French and Portuguese -- at Moscow's military institute for foreign languages before joining the air force.
Journalist Douglas Farah, who co-authored a book on Bout, has called him "a unique creature" born of the end of Communism and the rise of unbridled capitalism in the early 1990s.
He has repeatedly denied suggestions that he was a former KGB agent and that he bought weaponry, aircraft and helicopters at throwaway rates at the fall of the Soviet Union to supply to conflict zones.
burs/jmm
W.Lapointe--BTB