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Russia could concede $300 billion in frozen assets as part of Ukraine war settlement, sources say
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 21, 2025 21:03
Updated :
Feb 21, 2025 21:03

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A firefighter works at a site of an apartment building damaged during a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine January 28, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Sofiia Gatilova/Files

Russia could agree to using $300 billion of sovereign assets frozen in Europe for reconstruction in Ukraine but will insist that part of the money is spent on the one-fifth of the country that Moscow's forces control, three sources told Reuters.

Russia and the United States held their first face-to-face talks on ending the Ukraine war on Feb 18 in Saudi Arabia and both US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin have said they hope to meet soon.

After Putin sent troops into Ukraine in 2022, the United States and its allies prohibited transactions with Russia's central bank and finance ministry, blocking $300-$350 billion of sovereign Russian assets, mostly European, US and British government bonds held in a European securities depository.

While discussions between Russia and the United States are at a very early stage, one idea being floated in Moscow is that Russia could propose using a large chunk of the frozen reserves for rebuilding Ukraine as part of a possible peace deal, according to three sources with knowledge of the matter.

Swathes of eastern Ukraine have been devastated by the war and hundreds of thousands of soldiers killed or injured on both sides while millions of Ukrainians have fled to European countries or Russia. A year ago, the World Bank estimated reconstruction and recovery would cost $486 billion.

The sources spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the discussions and because discussions are only preliminary. The Kremlin declined to comment.

The idea that Russia may agree to using the frozen money to help rebuild Ukraine has not been previously reported, and may give an insight into what Russia is willing to compromise on as Moscow and Washington seek to end the war, at a time when Trump is pushing for US access to Ukrainian minerals to repay Washington's support.

Russia's main demands to stop the fighting include a withdrawal of Kyiv's troops from Ukrainian territory Moscow claims and an end to Ukraine's ambitions to join NATO. Ukraine says Russia must withdraw from its territory, and wants security guarantees from the West. The Trump administration says Ukraine has unrealistic, "illusionary" goals.

Reuters could not establish whether the idea of using the frozen funds was discussed between Russia and US counterparts in the Saudi meeting.

The Group of Seven stated in 2023 that the Russian sovereign funds will remain frozen until Russia pays for the damage it inflicted in Ukraine. Trump has said he would like Russia to return to the G7, a grouping of wealthy nations.

Russian Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina said on Thursday the bank was not part of any talks on lifting sanctions or unfreezing of Russia's reserves.

Russia has previously said plans to use the funds in Ukraine amounted to robbery.

The Ukrainian foreign ministry and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The British Foreign Office declined to comment.

"Nothing about Ukraine and the EU can be decided without Ukraine and the EU," said Anitta Hipper, a spokesperson for the European Commission. She said the EU and member states were helping Ukraine strengthen its position ahead of any talks, including with a new round of sanctions on Russia.

Renaissance Capital lead analyst Oleg Kouzmin said the differences between the United States and Europe, which controls most of the assets, would complicate a lifting of the freeze.

"It would require the European side to fully back the current stance of the US aimed at dialog with Russia," Kouzmin said, calling such a scenario "very optimistic".

TWO THIRD SPLIT?

Russia's frozen sovereign assets have been the subject of intense debate in the West with some proposing it be essentially given to Ukraine through a complex "repatriation loan", opens new tab.

One source with knowledge of the discussions in Moscow said that Russia could accept up to two-thirds of the reserves going to the restoration of Ukraine under a peace deal, provided there were accountability guarantees.

The rest could go to the Russian-controlled territories in eastern Ukraine that Russia now considers to be part of Russia, said the source.

Another source with knowledge of discussions said that Moscow would agree to using the money to rebuild Ukraine but that it was too early to say what the possible division might be. Two sources stressed that it was important to discuss which companies would get future contracts for reconstruction.

A different source, close to the Kremlin but not directly involved in the discussions, said that Russia would still demand the lifting of the freeze on the assets as part of gradual sanctions relief.

Several Western officials, especially in the German government and European Central Bank, have been reluctant to simply confiscate sovereign reserves, warning that such a move could face legal challenges and undermine the euro as a reserve currency.

Russian officials have repeatedly warned that the state confiscation of assets goes against free market principles, destroys banking security and erodes faith in reserve currencies. In retaliation, Russia has drafted legislation to confiscate funds from companies and investors from so-called unfriendly states, those that have hit it with sanctions. The bill has not yet been voted in Russia's State Duma lower house.

EUROPEAN FREEZE

At the time the assets were frozen, Russia's central bank said it held around $207 billion in euro assets, $67 billion in US dollar assets and $37 billion in British pound assets.

It also had holdings comprising $36 billion of Japanese yen, $19 billion in Canadian dollars, $6 billion in Australian dollars and $1.8 billion in Singapore dollars. Its Swiss franc holdings were about $1 billion.

Russia reports its total gold and foreign exchange reserves as around $627 billion, including the frozen funds. The value of Russia's frozen assets fluctuates according to bond prices and currency movements.

The bank's biggest bond holdings were in the sovereign bonds of China, Germany, France, Britain, Austria and Canada. Russia's gold reserves were held in Russia.

Around 159 billion euros of the assets were managed by Belgian clearing house Euroclear Bank as of early last year, Euroclear has said.

While the freezing of the funds has angered Moscow, some of Russia's most outspoken war hawks have previously acknowledged Russia may eventually part with the frozen reserves, provided that the controlled territories stay within Russia.

"I propose a solution. They pay this money towards our purchase of those territories, those lands that want to be with us," said Margarita Simonyan, head of the Russian state broadcaster RT, in 2023.

The Russian-controlled territories of Ukraine account for about 1% of Russia's gross domestic product, but some economists believe that their share could grow quickly if they remain with Russia when the war ends. The regions already provide around 5% of Russia's grain harvest.​
 
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US proposes Ukraine UN text omitting occupied territory
Agence France-Presse . United Nations, United States 22 February, 2025, 22:29

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File photo

The United States proposed Friday a United Nations resolution on the Ukraine conflict that omitted any mention of Kyiv’s territory occupied by Russia, diplomatic sources told AFP.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio urged UN members to approve the ‘simple, historic’ resolution.

Washington’s proposal comes amid an intensifying feud between president Donald Trump and president Volodymyr Zelensky which has seen Trump claim it was ‘not important’ for his Ukrainian counterpart to be involved in peace talks.

It also appeared to rival a separate draft resolution produced by Kyiv and its European allies, countries that Trump has also sought to sideline from talks on the future of the three-year-old war.

The Ukrainian-European text stresses the need to redouble diplomatic efforts to end the war this year, noting several initiatives to that end, while also blaming Russia for the invasion and committing to Kyiv’s ‘territorial integrity.’

The text also repeats the UN general assembly’s previous demands for an immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine.

Those votes had wide support, with around 140 of the 193 member states voting in favour.

Washington’s text, seen by AFP, calls for a ‘swift end to the conflict’ without mentioning Kyiv’s territorial integrity, and was welcomed by Moscow’s ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia as ‘a good move’—but stressed that it did not address the ‘roots’ of the conflict.

‘The United States has proposed a simple, historic resolution in the United Nations that we urge all member states to support in order to chart a path to peace,’ Rubio said in a statement Friday, without commenting in detail on the contents of the proposed resolution.

In a break with past resolutions proposed and supported by Washington, the latest draft, produced ahead of a general assembly meeting Monday to coincide with the third anniversary of the war, does not criticise Moscow.

Instead the 65-word text begins by ‘mourning the tragic loss of life throughout the Russia-Ukraine conflict.’

It then continued by ‘reiterating’ that the United Nation’s purpose is the maintenance of ‘international peace and security’—without singling out Moscow as the source of the conflict.

France’s ambassador to the UN, Nicolas De Riviere, the EU’s only permanent member of the council, said he had no comment ‘for the moment.’

‘A stripped-down text of this type that does not condemn Russian aggression or explicitly reference Ukraine’s territorial integrity looks like a betrayal of Kyiv and a jab at the EU, but also a show of disdain for core principles of international law,’ said Richard Gowan of the International Crisis Group.

‘I think even a lot of states that favour an early end to the war will worry that the US is ignoring core elements of the UN Charter.’​
 
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US wants return on Ukraine aid money: Trump
Agence France-Presse . National Harbor, United States 23 February, 2025, 22:21

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US president Donald Trump. | File photo

US president Donald Trump said on Saturday he was trying to get money back for the billions of dollars sent to support Ukraine’s war against Russia.

His comments came as Washington and Kyiv negotiate a mineral resources deal Trump wants as compensation for the wartime aid his predecessor Joe Biden gave Ukraine.

It was the latest twist in a whirlwind first month since he took office, during which he has upended US foreign policy by making diplomatic overtures towards the Kremlin over the heads of Ukraine and Europe.

Trump told delegates at the Conservative Political Action Conference near Washington: ‘I’m trying to get the money back, or secured.’

‘I want them to give us something for all of the money that we put up. We’re asking for rare earth and oil, anything we can get. We’re going to get our money back because it’s just not fair. And we will see, but I think we’re pretty close to a deal, and we better be close because that has been a horrible situation.’

Hours earlier, a source told AFP that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky was ‘not ready’ to sign such a deal, despite growing US pressure.

Trump’s special envoy Keith Kellogg, who met Zelensky this week, said the Ukrainian president understood signing a deal with the United States was ‘critical’.

But the Ukrainian source told AFP that Kyiv needed assurances first.

‘In the form in which the draft is now, the president is not ready to accept, we are still trying to make changes and add constructiveness,’ the source close to the matter said.

Ukraine wants any agreement signed with the United States to include security guarantees as it battles Russia’s nearly three-year invasion.

The negotiations between the two countries come amid a deepening war of words between Trump and Zelensky that has raised alarm in Kyiv and Europe.

On Wednesday, Trump branded his Ukrainian counterpart a ‘dictator’ and called for him to ‘move fast’ to end the war, a day after Russian and US officials held talks in Saudi Arabia without Kyiv.

Washington has proposed a United Nations resolution on the Ukraine conflict that omitted any mention of Kyiv’s territory occupied by Russia, diplomatic sources told AFP.

Trump has asked for ‘$500 billion worth’ of rare earth minerals to make up for aid given to Kyiv—a price tag Ukraine has balked at and which is much higher than published US aid figures.

‘There are no American obligations in the agreement regarding guarantees or investments, everything about them is very vague, and they want to extract $500 billion from us,’ the Ukrainian source told AFP.

‘What kind of partnership is this? And why do we have to give $500 billion, there is no answer,’ the source said, adding that Ukraine had proposed changes.

The United States has given Ukraine more than $60 billion in military aid since Russia’s invasion, according to official figures—the largest such contribution among Kyiv’s allies but substantially lower than Trump’s figures.

The Kiel Institute, a German economic research body, said that from 2022 until the end of 2024, the United States gave a total of $119.8 billion in financial, humanitarian and military aid.​
 
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Zelenskiy says he is willing to give up presidency if it means peace in Ukraine
REUTERS
Published :
Feb 23, 2025 21:44
Updated :
Feb 23, 2025 21:44

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy attends the Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, Germany, February 15, 2025. Photo : Sven Hoppe/Pool via REUTERS/Files

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Sunday he was willing to give up his position if it meant peace in Ukraine, quipping that he could exchange his departure for Ukraine's entry into NATO.

Zelenskiy also said he wanted to see US President Donald Trump as a partner to Ukraine and more than a simply a mediator between Kyiv and Moscow.

"I really want it to be more than just mediation... that's not enough," he told a press conference in Kyiv.​
 
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Xi hails Russia’s ‘positive efforts to defuse crisis’

Chinese President Xi Jinping yesterday hailed Moscow's "positive efforts to defuse" the Ukraine crisis in a call with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, state media said.

Xinhua news agency reported Xi as saying "China is happy to see Russia and relevant parties make positive efforts to defuse" the crisis in Ukraine.

Moscow and Beijing have strengthened military and trade ties since Russia sent troops into Ukraine, though China has sought to depict itself as a neutral party amid the nearly three-year conflict.

Beijing remains a close political and economic partner of Moscow and has never condemned Russia's actions.

Speaking of China's ties with Russia, Xi said "history and reality" show the two countries "are good neighbours that cannot be moved away, and true friends who share weal and woe, support each other and achieve common development", Xinhua reported.

The Kremlin later said Putin "briefed" Xi on the talks between Russian and US officials held in Saudi Arabia -- their first high-level meeting since Russia sent troops into Ukraine three years ago.​
 
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