EU freezes Russian assets ahead of pivotal Ukraine talks

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The EU froze indefinitely €210bn of Russian sovereign assets held in the bloc on Friday as Kyiv and its European allies sought to strengthen their hand at a critical phase in US-orchestrated peace talks.

The freezing paves the way for a loan to be raised against the assets to prop up Ukraine’s defence. EU leaders still have to overcome strong objections from Belgium, where the assets are mostly held, at a summit next week.

Moscow fired back, filing a lawsuit against Euroclear, the Brussels-based depository holding most of the assets, which may allow Russia to seize the company’s assets held inside the country.

The moves came as the Trump administration has ratcheted up the pressure on Kyiv to sign a peace deal with Russia by Christmas on largely unfavourable terms first drawn up between Washington and Moscow.

European leaders have closed ranks with Ukraine as it seeks to avoid being forced into what many Ukrainians and Europeans regard as capitulation.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is due to travel to Berlin on Monday to meet German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and other European leaders. Zelenskyy said they would discuss the security guarantees that European capitals would provide Ukraine as part of a peace settlement.

Volodymyr Zelenskiy records himself on a smartphone while wearing military gear, with a damaged sign reading "Kupiansk" in the background.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy takes a selfie at the frontline town of Kupiansk, east of Kharkiv, on Friday © Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

Ukrainian negotiators, supported by European officials, have sought to improve the terms of the US-brokered peace proposal, grasping for points of leverage while also considering once unthinkable concessions.

A revised peace proposal drawn up by Ukrainian and European officials and sent to Washington this week envisages Ukraine joining the EU as soon as 2027, an accelerated timetable that would rip up the bloc’s established accession procedure.

Intensive diplomacy was under way to establish “common ground” between Ukrainians, Europeans and Americans on a new version of the deal that could then be presented to Russia, said a French official.

Yuri Ushakov, foreign policy adviser to President Vladimir Putin, said: “When we do see it, I sense that we’re not going to like a lot of it.”

While the EU made its move on Russian assets, Zelenskyy made a surprise visit on Friday to the frontline city of Kupiansk, in eastern Ukraine, which Moscow claimed to have captured weeks ago. The Ukrainian army was pushing Russian forces back, Zelenskyy said, claiming its resistance there would strengthen Ukraine’s hand in talks.

“This is exactly how it works: all our strong positions inside the country become strong positions in discussions about ending the war,” he said.

Still, Russian forces continue to advance along other axes across the 1,200km frontline, heaping pressure on Ukraine’s war-weary army.

European officials remain highly sceptical that Russia will agree to anything that falls short of their maximalist objectives, which include subjugation of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy has said Ukraine is discussing with US officials the details of a possible “free economic” or “demilitarised” zone in Donetsk province, which Moscow is insisting Ukraine surrender as the price of any deal. He has ruled out handing over territory, but suggested that Ukrainian forces could pull back from the contact line in the area if Russian forces did the same and Ukraine received strong security guarantees.

French foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot said Zelenskyy “has shown for the last nine months his willingness to create the conditions for a peace deal that is both fair and lasting, which is not a capitulation. It is now up to Vladimir Putin to take the last step and put an end to this imperialist and colonial war.”

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