UK to Loan Ukraine £2B from Frozen Russian Assets
Britain will loan Ukraine an additional £2.26B ($2.93B) in funding for its war-effort against Russia, it was announced on Tuesday. Ukraine, however, will not have to repay the loan — with repayment coming from interest on Russian assets seized by European banks earlier in the war....
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Facts
- Britain will loan Ukraine an additional £2.26B ($2.93B) in funding for its war-effort against Russia, it was announced on Tuesday. Ukraine, however, will not have to repay the loan — with repayment coming from interest on Russian assets seized by European banks earlier in the war.[1][2]
- The funds will make up Britain's contribution to a wider $50B loan — which will also be re-payed using interest on Russian assets — agreed by G7 nations in June, and expected to be unveiled later this week.[3][4]
- G7 countries initially wanted to use all of the $300B of Russian assets held by Western banks, but this met opposition from the IMF who said such a move could undermine confidence in the global financial system and may face legal challenges from Moscow.[3]
- Announcing the UK contribution, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves said she was confident that using interest on these assets was legally above board.[3][5]
- While the contributions of other G7 nations was yet to be publicly confirmed, the US was expected to contribute roughly $20B, while Canada was expected to give around $5B. It's anticipated that Germany, France, and Italy will pick up the remaining sum.[3][1]
- Elsewhere, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin traveled to Ukraine and met with Ukrainian Pres. Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday. The trip was intended as a show of support, in advance of US elections that could upend Washington's support for Kyiv. During the meeting, Austin announced $400M of further US military aid to Ukraine.[6]
Sources: [1]Sky News, [2]BBC News, [3]Guardian, [4]Reuters, [5]The Kyiv Independent and [6]CNN.
Narratives
- Pro-establishment narrative, as provided by France 24. The purpose of this agreement is to give Ukraine the means and resources to continue fending off Russia's aggression, as well as to help it rebuild its country. Russia must be made to pay for the damage it has inflicted on Ukraine.
- Pro-Russia narrative, as provided by TASS. This is banditry and theft — pure and simple. The proposal to use revenue from Russia's frozen assets to fund Ukraine in the conflict is yet another example of the EU degrading its own standards and violating its commitments to international law.