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Poland is leading European efforts to use frozen Russian assets to fund Trump's $10 billion weapons package for Ukraine rather than burden European taxpayers with the costs.
BRUSSELS ― The European Union is looking to extract billions of extra euros from frozen Russian assets by moving them into riskier investments — via a plan that would increase aid to Ukraine while ...
The European Union's top diplomat says Russia's massive military spending suggests that President Vladimir Putin plans to use his armed forces again elsewhere in the future. EU foreign policy chief ...
According to Politico, the proposed plan would redirect the frozen Russian assets into a special investment fund under EU control, allowing for higher returns without confiscating the principal.
“This is a long-term plan for a long-term aggression. You don’t spend that much on (the) military, if you do not plan to use it,” Kallas told EU lawmakers in Strasbourg, France.
European Union diplomats said they expect to reach a deal during an EU summit this week on an 18th package of sanctions against Russia, which Slovakia and Hungary are using as a bargaining chip ...
The European Union imposed on Monday an asset freeze and a ban on travel to the EU on five people linked with toppled Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad for supporting crimes against humanity ...
The European Union intends to generate hundreds of billions more euros from frozen Russian assets by transferring them to an alternative investment fund.
European Union leaders are calling for greater efforts to help meet Ukraine’s pressing military needs.
Russia is reviving its controversial privatization strategy to raise funds amid war spending and sanctions, but critics warn it may again be a superficial exercise with no real shift in control.
The EU is working on yet another raft of sanctions against Russia, but the leaders made little headway. A key aim is to make further progress in blocking Russia’s “shadow fleet” of oil ...