Brussels, Dec 11, (dpa/GNA) – EU member states agreed on Thursday to create a legal basis for the use of Russian state assets for Ukraine by majority vote, so as to permanently prevent the funds from being returned to Russia, the Danish EU presidency announced.
This means countries such as Hungary will not be able to veto future EU sanctions decisions extending the current freeze on Russian assets held in the bloc.
At present, Russian assets held in the EU are frozen under a sanctions mechanism that needs to be renewed every six months – an arrangement that prevents the planned use of Russian assets to fund long-term credits for Ukraine.
To block the money indefinitely, member states are invoking a legal article allowing the adoption of appropriate measures by a majority – at least 15 of the EU’s 27 states, representing 65% of the bloc’s population – in the event of severe economic difficulties.
According to the legal text, Russia’s war on Ukraine is causing severe economic challenges. The transfer of funds to Russia must therefore be urgently prevented to limit harm to the EU economy.
The regulation is set to be adopted before an EU summit in Brussels next week.
By then at the latest, backers of the plan – including German Chancellor Friedrich Merz – also hope to win over Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever for the proposed loan scheme.
Without Belgium, where the lion’s share of Russian funds earmarked for Ukraine is held by Euroclear, the implementation of the scheme is considered extremely difficult.
Euroclear holds about €185 billion ($217.5 billion) of a total €210 billion in Russian assets held in the EU.
The Belgian government has so far blocked the plan, citing legal and financial risks.
It fears in particular that Moscow could retaliate against European private individuals and companies, for example through expropriations in Russia.
De Wever has set three conditions for Belgian participation.
There must be a guarantee that all potential risks are mutualized among member states and that sufficient financial guarantees are in place from the start to meet any obligations.
He also called for comprehensive liquidity and risk protection for all citizens or companies affected by the plan, and for the involvement of all other EU countries where Russian central bank assets are frozen.
That includes Germany, France, Sweden and Cyprus, according to the European Commission.
Thursday evening, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Belgium’s concerns were understood and a solution is being worked on intensively.
Meanwhile, Hungary strongly rejected Thursday’s decision, saying it is “deeply concerned by the recent tendency of circumventing unanimous decision-making procedures” in EU foreign and security policy.
The government stated that it reserves the right to challenge the decision at the European Court of Justice, the EU’s top court.
GNA
Kiev, Dec 11, (dpa/GNA) – Ukraine is insisting on a target strength of 800,000 troops for its military under a revised version of the US peace plan to end the almost four-year-long war with Russia.
“That is the real strength of today’s army, and it has been agreed with the military,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told journalists in Kiev on Thursday.
This point of the current 20-point draft has therefore been sufficiently revised, he added. The original US plan that became known in November cited a cap of 600,000 Ukrainian troops.
However, observers doubt that the army still has this number in reality. According to the public prosecutor’s office, there were more than 300,000 cases of desertion or absence by troops since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022.
After a record high of more than 21,600 registered cases in October, the authorities classified the figures as confidential from November onwards.
Before the war, Ukraine had a standing army of about 290,000 personnel. To offset any numerical disadvantage relative to Russia, Kiev expects its Western allies to contribute significantly to military spending in the event of a peace agreement.
Before the war began, Ukraine was the poorest country in Europe, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Foreign donor states now contribute more than 40% of the national budget as Ukraine seeks to join the European Union.
GNA