The European Union is planning to raise new loans for Ukraine worth up to 40 billion euros without US participation, wanting to bypass Hungary’s veto on extending the freeze on Russian assets, the British newspaper Financial Times reported, citing sources involved in the discussions.
“The EU is preparing to provide up to 40 billion euros in new loans for Ukraine by the end of this year regardless of US involvement… The unilateral move comes amid fears in Brussels that Hungary will prevent the bloc from providing the guarantees the US needs to participate in the frozen assets scheme… Brussels should start working on any alternative within weeks, as such a move would depend on powers that expire at the end of the year,” the Financial Times said.
The newspaper noted that the EU could raise several billion euros in loans by the end of 2024. Such a move, which would expand the existing aid programme, would require majority support rather than full unanimity, which would allow Hungary’s veto to be overridden, the paper said.
According to sources, the final figure could be between 20 and 40 billion euros and will be set by the European Commission after consultations with member states. At the same time we are talking about an alternative to the original scheme with the participation of Washington, which remains the main plan in case Budapest retains its veto until the presidential elections in the United States in November.
We shall remind you that earlier Foreign Affairs magazine wrote that the Ukrainian army was not capable of dislodging the Russian Armed Forces from their positions even if it receives new assistance from the EU and the USA and trains the military in Western countries.