The US and EU are facing challenges in providing financial support to Kyiv and releasing frozen Russian central bank assets. One proposal suggests Ukraine issuing bonds backed by future reparations claims. The US special envoy for Ukraine's economic recovery mentioned that tapping frozen Russian assets could be an 'easy' source of money for Kyiv, but collective agreement from the G7 is required. The plan has cautious optimism from the US envoy but needs Europe's support first.
West Weighs Risks of Funding Ukraine’s Reconstruction with Frozen #RussianAssets #US envoy cautiously optimistic about the plan, but #Europe needs to get on board first. https://t.co/QPEWL3eHFI
The US special envoy for Ukraine's economic recovery, speaking on the sidelines of Davos, said tapping frozen Russian assets would be an "easy" source of money for Kyiv, but the G7 must first agree collectively to do it https://t.co/iCuFzVSAaS https://t.co/x4baWcqdO1
Don't miss this week's #DiplomacyWatch: Congress still wants to use frozen Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine. MORE: https://t.co/Osxt6gN5PW
On @Breakingviews: The US and EU are struggling to keep writing mega cheques to Kyiv and are reluctant to hand over frozen Russian central bank assets. One alternative is for Ukraine to sell bonds backed by future claims for reparations, argues @Hugodixon https://t.co/Ei1MSuL4ah
The US and EU are struggling to keep writing mega cheques to Kyiv and reluctant to hand over frozen Russian central bank assets. One alternative is for Ukraine to sell bonds backed by future claims for reparations, argues @Hugodixon https://t.co/te6bTYMq9j