The
Journal "vehemently denied" the charges, and the arrest was criticized by the White House, the
Committee to Protect Journalists, and the
Society of Professional Journalists, and other media advocacy groups. On April 27, 2023, the Biden administration sanctioned
Russia's Federal Security Service and Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps intelligence organization, accusing them of wrongfully detaining Americans.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke to his counterpart,
Sergey Lavrov, on April 2. He expressed "grave concern" over Gershkovich's arrest and called for the release of
Paul Whelan, a former
Marine accused of espionage in 2018. The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs repeated the Kremlin's claim that Gershkovich committed "illegal activities". Russian ambassador to the United States
Anatoly Antonov claimed that Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
Victoria Nuland threatened Russia with "retaliatory measures" unless Gershkovich was released. On April 10, 2023, the US State Department officially designated Gershkovich as "wrongfully detained", meaning his case will be transferred to the office of the
Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs.
White House press secretary
Karine Jean-Pierre called Gershkovich's arrest "unacceptable". In a statement, Jean-Pierre said, "We condemn the detention of Mr. Gershkovich in the strongest terms." Additionally, she said that releasing Gershkovich was a priority for Biden. Departing for
Mississippi to see the aftermath of
tornadoes in the state, Biden told reporters, "Let him go". On a diplomatic visit, vice president
Kamala Harris echoed his statements from
Zambia with president
Hakainde Hichilema. The
European Union and
NATO demanded Gershkovich's release. The United States sanctioned the FSB and
Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps on April 27 for detaining American citizens.
The Wall Street Journal wrote that it stands in solidarity with Gershkovich and his family. A coalition of leaders of dozens of media organizations condemned the arrest in a letter sent to Antonov, as did a separate statement from
The New York Times,
Bloomberg News,
Politico, and
The Washington Post. Former Russia correspondent Alan Philps compared Gershkovich's arrest to
Joseph Stalin's
censorship of media in the
Soviet Union. Conservative columnist
Bret Stephens stated that Putin would benefit from reading Gershkovich's works to gain an independent assessment of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Brittney Griner, who was arrested in Russia for carrying
hashish oil before being involved in
a prisoner exchange with arms dealer
Viktor Bout, called for his release. In an editorial "Press Freedom Is Your Freedom" WSJ Publisher
Almar Latour described the campaign to free Gershkovich as a "global press freedom effort", a contextualisation that would continue throughout the ordeal. However, the WSJ's stand on press freedom was undermined by revelations of actions against fellow WSJ Journalist
Selina Cheng during Gershkovich's incarceration. According to Cheng, her WSJ supervisor told her that "having its employees advocating for press freedom publicly would create a conflict" with employment at the WSJ and directed Cheng to withdraw from participation in the
Hong Kong Journalists Association, a trade union union and vocal advocate for press freedom in the city. Cheng did not withdraw, and was fired by the WSJ soon after taking up the leadership role at the
Hong Kong Journalists Association. The WSJ action attracted a storm of criticism from press freedom advocates, human rights groups, and journalist unions and clubs. Comments and editorials contrasted WSJ's starkly different treatment of Cheng and Gershkovich, calling its actions against Cheng "baffling", "heartless","gutless", "outrageous, hypocritical and disappointing" while praising the support offered to Gershkovich. The firm's response was "The Wall Street Journal has been and continues to be a fierce and vocal advocate for press freedom in Hong Kong and around the world" On Gershkovich's release, WSJ would publish a full page spread "Welcome Home, Evan. Freedom does not exist without a free press." The arrest of Gershkovich—a respected figure among independent Russian journalists—provoked a response from Russian media. In his first story for
The Moscow Times in 2019, he brought attention to the non-governmental organization
OVD-Info, and relied upon the group mourning Ukrainians killed in the
Russo-Ukrainian War. Russia's leading independent journalists published an open letter demanding his release.
Mediazona offered live coverage of his arrest on their website. On
YouTube, exiled broadcast journalist Maksim Kurnikov noted that Gershkovich's arrest could harm Russia's overview of the war. Russian state media reported that the trial of detained US journalist Evan Gershkovich scheduled to be held behind closed doors. Gershkovich denied the charges and his trial was set to begin on June 26, 2024, in Yekaterinburg. Gershkovich's trial resumed in Russia behind closed doors after nearly 16 months in detention. Washington dismissed the charges as fabricated, and a UN panel deemed his detention arbitrary. == Analysis ==