European leaders had hoped to flex their collective muscles with a huge pot of money to fund Ukraine’s war effort, one
so large that it would put Kyiv in a strong negotiating position with Moscow.
That plan remains in jeopardy, and what was meant to be a show of strength is at risk of turning into a display of messy
weakness when Europe is already floundering for influence on Ukraine, repeatedly left out of peace talks brokered by the
At the core of the plan is as much as 210 billion euros ($244 billion) in Russian state assets, frozen in Belgium, that
European leaders have been hoping for months to use to make a giant loan to Ukraine. Agreement on how to do this has
In a last-ditch effort to make the plan work, European Union policymakers on Wednesday unveiled an updated version of
the proposal that includes legal workarounds that will make it easier to enact the plan without support from every
The ideas, which will be considered at a meeting of European leaders in Brussels on Dec. 18, could help the bloc
overcome opposition from Hungary. But Belgium, where the money is held, remains skeptical, and diplomats and analysts
have begun to acknowledge that policymakers could find themselves forced to offer Ukraine a more modest financial
The European Union laid out a less ambitious option on Wednesday, in case the frozen asset idea does not work.
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