RT.com
19 Dec 2025, 00:04 GMT+10
The funds reportedly play a key role in President Donald Trumps Ukraine peace plan
The EU's insistence on seizing Russian central bank assets stands in the way of US President Donald Trump's attempts to resolve the Ukraine conflict, Politico and The Times have reported, citing officials in Washington.
EU leaders are meeting in Brussels on Thursday to debate using an estimated €210 billion ($246 billion) in Russian assets to back a so-called "reparations loan" for Kiev - a move Moscow has condemned as "theft." Belgium, where most of the assets are held, has demanded that the legal risks be shared among bloc members.
"The EU's problem isn't really Belgium, it's Trump," Politico wrote on Wednesday. The US administration's "backchanneling with capitals" has led to Italy, Bulgaria, Malta, and the Czech Republic joining the group of EU nations opposing the grab, the outlet wrote.
Even if the money is successfully seized, "the Europeans are going to have to give it back," The Times cited a source close to the US discussions as saying. The frozen Russian funds are seen by Washington as a "crucial part of Trump's proposed settlement plan," it wrote on Wednesday.
Trump has proposed that Russia's assets be unfrozen and invested in US-led reconstruction efforts in Ukraine, as well as joint projects with Moscow, according to an early draft published by the media last month.
While not commenting on Trump's plan regarding Russian assets, officials in Moscow said the US-backed peace talks have been continually obstructed by Kiev's European sponsors.
Western Europe is attempting to "scheme against the US" and maintain its proxy war in Ukraine, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said earlier this week.
To bypass the need for unanimous approval, the EU invoked controversial emergency legislation last week to lock the assets in place temporarily, arguing that any subsequent steps can be approved separately by a qualified majority of 15 out of 27 member states representing at least 65% of the EU's population.
In response, the Russian central bank filed lawsuits against Belgian-based Euroclear, where most of the funds are held, as well as several European banks.
(RT.com)
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