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EU reaches $105 billion deal on Ukraine funding, won’t use frozen Russian assets for now

  • On Friday, EU leaders decided to borrow cash to fund Ukraine rather than use frozen Russian assets, approving 90 billion support for 2026-27, EU summit chairman Antonio Costa announced.
  • Facing urgent financing, the International Monetary Fund forecasts a $160 billion funding gap over two years, while Belgium demanded guarantees amid legal and retaliation risks tied to frozen Russian assets.
  • The deal stipulates Ukraine will repay the loan only after Russia pays reparations, while the EU reserved the right to use frozen Russian assets and mandated its executive to explore that option.
  • Belgium insisted Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever demanded binding guarantees for approval, while unanimity rules exempt Hungary, Slovakia and Czech Republic from joint borrowing guarantees.
  • The move positions the European Commission's proposal to use frozen Russian assets as secondary to joint borrowing, while EU diplomats say funding is secured for two years but some see it as preserving face; Euroclear, Belgian securities depository, holds most immobilized Russian assets, complicating immediate use.
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Following the summit, the EU countries agreed to provide Ukraine with a loan of 90 billion euros, secured by the bloc's own budget, without using Russian frozen assets, said Antonio Costa, President of the European Council.

·Riga, Latvia
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Lean Left

EU summit: Months of talks about using Russian money to help Ukraine came to nothing. At 3 a.m., the European…

·Netherlands
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Lean Left

Kyyiv receives 90 billion euros via interest-free EU loans. Moscow's funds remain frozen. Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic do not go with guarantees

·Vienna, Austria
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The Washington Post broke the news in on Thursday, December 18, 2025.
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