
Greece (Brussels Morning Newspaper) Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the European Union has turned to its most powerful leverage—economic sanctions—in an effort to curb the Kremlin’s offensive and bring Moscow to the negotiating table. From the outset, EU leaders ruled out any direct military intervention, viewing it as both strategically unfeasible and politically untenable. Even proposals to position a peacekeeping mission along the Russia–Ukraine border were quickly dismissed, leaving Brussels with financial measures and political solidarity as its principal tools.
In practice, this has translated into an unprecedented package of aid commitments, arms deals, and budgetary support designed to keep Ukraine’s government and military afloat. The EU’s approach has underscored its determination to hold the political alliance with Kyiv together, while avoiding steps that might draw the bloc into direct confrontation with Moscow. Yet the longer the war drags on, the more pressing the question becomes of how Ukraine will rebuild and redefine itself once the fighting ends—particularly for a country that has spent over a decade attempting to escape the gravitational pull of the Kremlin.
On Saturday, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas addressed one of the most sensitive issues facing the bloc: what to do with the hundreds of billions in frozen Russian assets held across Europe. Kallas confirmed that the EU will examine mechanisms to channel these assets into Ukraine’s defense and reconstruction. Still, she cautioned that outright confiscation remains politically unrealistic, reflecting the legal and diplomatic hurdles the bloc faces as it attempts to balance principle with pragmatism in one of its most consequential geopolitical tests.
Europe’s red line
President Vladimir Putin’s hold on power is reinforced not only by the weight of Russia’s bureaucratic state machine but also by the loyalty of a cadre of oligarchs whose fortunes are deeply intertwined with the Kremlin. For years, these wealthy elites have parked their assets abroad—in Switzerland, the United Kingdom, across Asia, on offshore islands, and within the European Union—whether as investments or as gateways to the lifestyle and security the West affords.
Today, an estimated €210 billion ($245.85 billion) in Russian state and private assets are frozen inside the EU, according to official figures. The question of what to do with this money has become one of the most divisive issues facing the bloc. Ukraine, backed by frontline states such as Estonia, Lithuania, and Poland, has pressed Brussels to move beyond symbolic freezes and seize the assets outright, redirecting them into Kyiv’s defense and reconstruction. Their argument has only sharpened as Ukraine stares at a looming budget shortfall of tens of billions of euros in the coming year.
But Europe’s largest economies have drawn a red line. France and Germany, along with Belgium—home to Euroclear, the securities depository where the bulk of these assets are held—have resisted calls for outright confiscation. Officials in Paris, Berlin, and Brussels argue that such a step would raise profound legal challenges, set a precedent that could spook global investors, and even undermine confidence in the euro. Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot was blunt:
Comments
2 responses to “Can the EU Rebuild Democracy While Containing War?”
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Seems like the EU’s idea of rebuilding democracy is like trying to fix a leaky roof with a bucket of water—good luck with that! 🤷♂️💸
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Contemplating whether the EU can juggle democracy and warfare is like asking if a cat can learn to swim—charming thought but let’s not get our hopes up, eh? 🐱💦
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Rebuilding democracy while juggling a war and frozen Russian assets? Must be a piece of cake, right? 🍰 Let’s just hope they don’t trip over their own red tape in the process! 😂
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