Foreign Affairs resources?
#41
True enough but why bother casting blame on smaller sovereigns for protecting their critical interests.Turkey rules Nato’s largest contingent in theater? Virtually no one believes they’re interested in anything other than waiting this out. Seems to me relying on bantam weight former Soviet satellites to isolate Russia is a strategic waste of time. Next
But understanding the constraints isn’t necessarily the same as thinking they are a good thing.
#42
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Joined: Apr 2011
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Likes: 143
Wasn’t blaming, merely explaining. Not unlike Alaska or Rhode Island having two senators each, just like massively more populous Texas and California. Just a function of the compromises that were made to make the larger political organization possible.
But understanding the constraints isn’t necessarily the same as thinking they are a good thing.
But understanding the constraints isn’t necessarily the same as thinking they are a good thing.
“Slovakia won’t take part in any legal or financial schemes to seize frozen assets if those funds would be spent on military costs in Ukraine,” Fico said, Bloomberg reported, citing the interview with STVR.The EU is trying to agree on a plan to use revenues from immobilized Russian assets to provide a €140 billion loan to Ukraine, without seizing the assets. The EU plan is crucial as the International Monetary Fund is concerned about Kyiv's public finances, and even IMF aid depends on the EU's support.
#43
Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico warned that his country will oppose using Russian frozen assets to fund Ukraine's defense spending, speaking with Slovakian public broadcaster STVR on Saturday.
I know you aren’t blaming them. Critics of reluctant border zone governments are using their pushback rhetoric as a convenient excuse. So the Slovak PM’s bottom line; no support for the proposed, ‘crucial’ EU/IMF loan guarantees. Fantasy on the part of Western finance ministers it’ll happen in unity. Outcome of this proxy slog lies in the hands of a budget deadlocked continental congress.No change there.
I know you aren’t blaming them. Critics of reluctant border zone governments are using their pushback rhetoric as a convenient excuse. So the Slovak PM’s bottom line; no support for the proposed, ‘crucial’ EU/IMF loan guarantees. Fantasy on the part of Western finance ministers it’ll happen in unity. Outcome of this proxy slog lies in the hands of a budget deadlocked continental congress.No change there.
That’s why Belgium is vetoing any actual use of those deposits (as opposed to interest earned on those deposits) until/unless other members of the EU agree to accept their pro rata share of the legal liability if/when those legal cases eventually make their way through the glacially slow European civil courts system.
For an in depth discussion, read this:
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegDa...)775908_EN.pdf
Point one is, Belgium doesn’t want to be the only one without a chair when the music stops. They want the rest of the Eu to indemnify them against legal losses.
Point two is, banking is big business in Belgium. Belgian banks hold about €1.15 Trillion in assets, much of that from overseas. They fear that if the precedent is set that if the international community gets mad at your government your money gets seized, then a lot of those deposits are going to go elsewhere when this is all over.
#44
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Joined: Apr 2011
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I think the real holdup is Belgium (population 11.9 million) whose bank holds about $200 billion in impounded Russian assets. While some of this is Russian state money a lot of it is from everyone from oligarchs thought to be friendly with Putin to pretty much Joe average Russian. And not having anticipated the situation, the provision of even freezing the assets is legally questionable under both Belgian and EU law, and they have the same sort of prohibition of ex post facto law making as the US constitution has.
That’s why Belgium is vetoing any actual use of those deposits (as opposed to interest earned on those deposits)
Point two is, banking is big business in Belgium. Belgian banks hold about €1.15 Trillion in assets, much of that from overseas.
That’s why Belgium is vetoing any actual use of those deposits (as opposed to interest earned on those deposits)
Point two is, banking is big business in Belgium. Belgian banks hold about €1.15 Trillion in assets, much of that from overseas.
#45
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Joined: Oct 2009
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The problem is the nature of the EU. A significant number of activities involve UNANIMITY of all their nations or at least nobody actually voting in opposition, sort of like NATO needing unanimity of approval for new members. It gives these relatively little and inconsequential countries a veto over many things requiring the rest of the EU to somehow buy them off with concessions in other areas or just not be able to act. Hungary has been working this scam for some time now. Czechia and Slovakia are now getting into the act as well apparently.
It paralyzed central government.
The past lessons once again seem forgotten.
#46
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 3,517
Likes: 143
No shortage of newspeak for state sponsored primordial acts of horror these days either. Maybe even a 2nd/3rd place evening news story. Because Taylor’s outrage at NFL politic ranks first. All of it washed away & replaced this time next year with still better live stream bs.
#47
https://www.politico.eu/article/russ...g-robert-fico/
Russian assets impasse faces obstacles beyond Belgium
Talks between senior Commission officials and the Belgian government over a €140B loan to Ukraine fell short of a breakthrough on Friday.
NOVEMBER 11, 2025 4:11 AM CET
BY BJARKE SMITH-MEYER, SEB STARCEVIC AND CAMILLE GIJSThe European effort to tap frozen Russian assets to keep Ukraine afloat is stalling over Belgian objections, but Slovakia’s leader is reminding the EU that he’s also in line to block the plan.
Belgium’s demands for financial guarantees from EU capitals against the loan have become the focal point of the initiative, which would leverage frozen Russian state assets on Belgian soil. Top brass within the European Commission fell short of convincing the Belgian premiership to get on board with the plan on Friday, according to two officials briefed on the talks.
Then Slovakia’s prime minister, Robert Fico, chimed in, further complicating the bloc’s drive to fill Kyiv’s war chest before it runs bare in the spring.
“Slovakia won’t take part in any legal or financial schemes to seize frozen assets if those funds would be spent on military costs in Ukraine,” Fico told the Slovakian public broadcaster, STVR, on Sunday.
Fico’s comments signal the legal challenge the Commission faces to counteract the veto threat that Kremlin-friendly countries in the EU have over Russian sanctions — also a key demand from the Belgians. The Commission is working on a legal loophole to keep the Russian assets on ice until Moscow ends the war and pays war reparations to Ukraine.
Without the loophole, Slovakia or Hungary could torpedo the entire initiative when the EU needs to reauthorize its Russian sanctions every six months, sending any sanctions cash back to Moscow.
EU finance ministers will take up the debate again when they meet for this month’s Ecofin gathering in Brussels, with hopes that the Commission will formally provide a list of alternative financing options for Ukraine if the EU can’t agree to use sanctioned Kremlin cash.
The options list is designed to focus minds and remind EU capital that they’ll to dig into their own coffers to back Ukraine, if the reparations loan fails to get off the ground — an unappealing prospect for countries whose economies are still reeling from a bruising pandemic. The same goes for Slovakia, whose debt pile hit 88.2 percent of its economic output in the summer.
Among them is Norway, whose finance minister, Jens Stoltenberg, is arriving in Brussels on Wednesday to discuss Kyiv’s financing needsamong other policy topics. Economists and Norwegian politicians have suggested that Norway, bolstered by its giant sovereign wealth fund, provide the guarantee for the reparations loan. While welcome, the chances of that happening are slim, according to the official quoted above.
The Commission is also encouraging EU capitals to use a recent €150 billion initiative for procuring defense contracts, dubbed SAFE, to get more weapons into the hands of Ukrainian troops.
For the rest, the EU will have to step in unless Belgium, Hungary and Slovakia relent.
EU leaders are next scheduled to meet in mid-December. But the same official said that an agreement on the reparations loan then would be too late, as it’ll take months to get aspects of the deal through some national parliaments, including France and Germany.
Delays at the EU level also have a knock-on effect on international financing for Ukraine from the world’s lender of last resort. The International Monetary Fund will only lend more money to Kyiv when it’s comfortable with the country’s financial health, and the reparations loan is key to securing a positive outcome.
BY BJARKE SMITH-MEYER, SEB STARCEVIC AND CAMILLE GIJSThe European effort to tap frozen Russian assets to keep Ukraine afloat is stalling over Belgian objections, but Slovakia’s leader is reminding the EU that he’s also in line to block the plan.
Belgium’s demands for financial guarantees from EU capitals against the loan have become the focal point of the initiative, which would leverage frozen Russian state assets on Belgian soil. Top brass within the European Commission fell short of convincing the Belgian premiership to get on board with the plan on Friday, according to two officials briefed on the talks.
Then Slovakia’s prime minister, Robert Fico, chimed in, further complicating the bloc’s drive to fill Kyiv’s war chest before it runs bare in the spring.
“Slovakia won’t take part in any legal or financial schemes to seize frozen assets if those funds would be spent on military costs in Ukraine,” Fico told the Slovakian public broadcaster, STVR, on Sunday.
Fico’s comments signal the legal challenge the Commission faces to counteract the veto threat that Kremlin-friendly countries in the EU have over Russian sanctions — also a key demand from the Belgians. The Commission is working on a legal loophole to keep the Russian assets on ice until Moscow ends the war and pays war reparations to Ukraine.
Without the loophole, Slovakia or Hungary could torpedo the entire initiative when the EU needs to reauthorize its Russian sanctions every six months, sending any sanctions cash back to Moscow.
EU finance ministers will take up the debate again when they meet for this month’s Ecofin gathering in Brussels, with hopes that the Commission will formally provide a list of alternative financing options for Ukraine if the EU can’t agree to use sanctioned Kremlin cash.
The options list is designed to focus minds and remind EU capital that they’ll to dig into their own coffers to back Ukraine, if the reparations loan fails to get off the ground — an unappealing prospect for countries whose economies are still reeling from a bruising pandemic. The same goes for Slovakia, whose debt pile hit 88.2 percent of its economic output in the summer.
Spare change
Meanwhile, the Commission is looking for other channels to help buttress Ukraine’s finances so that it can keep up the fight against Russian forces.Among them is Norway, whose finance minister, Jens Stoltenberg, is arriving in Brussels on Wednesday to discuss Kyiv’s financing needsamong other policy topics. Economists and Norwegian politicians have suggested that Norway, bolstered by its giant sovereign wealth fund, provide the guarantee for the reparations loan. While welcome, the chances of that happening are slim, according to the official quoted above.
The Commission is also encouraging EU capitals to use a recent €150 billion initiative for procuring defense contracts, dubbed SAFE, to get more weapons into the hands of Ukrainian troops.
For the rest, the EU will have to step in unless Belgium, Hungary and Slovakia relent.
EU leaders are next scheduled to meet in mid-December. But the same official said that an agreement on the reparations loan then would be too late, as it’ll take months to get aspects of the deal through some national parliaments, including France and Germany.
Delays at the EU level also have a knock-on effect on international financing for Ukraine from the world’s lender of last resort. The International Monetary Fund will only lend more money to Kyiv when it’s comfortable with the country’s financial health, and the reparations loan is key to securing a positive outcome.
#48
3 hours ago3 hours ago
"I have submitted my resignation," she wrote in a social media post, adding that she had not violated any laws.
Grynchuk is not known to have been charged in the case, which centers on allegations of $100 million (€86 million) in kickbacks. She has also not been named by investigators or prosecutors as having profited from the scheme.
According to Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko, German Galushchenko, the former energy minister who became justice minister in July, had also offered his resignation
Energy minister announces her resignation over corruption scandal
Shortly after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for her removal over a sweeping corruption scheme in the country's energy sector, Ukraine's Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk announced her resignation."I have submitted my resignation," she wrote in a social media post, adding that she had not violated any laws.
Grynchuk is not known to have been charged in the case, which centers on allegations of $100 million (€86 million) in kickbacks. She has also not been named by investigators or prosecutors as having profited from the scheme.
According to Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko, German Galushchenko, the former energy minister who became justice minister in July, had also offered his resignation
#49
https://www.politico.eu/article/frie...ome-and-fight/
NOVEMBER 13, 2025 6:37 PM CET
BY NETTE NÖSTLINGER AND LAURA HÜLSEMANNBERLIN — German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to curb the flow of young Ukrainian men to Germany and ensure they stay to defend their country.
“In a lengthy telephone conversation today, I asked the Ukrainian president to ensure that young men in particular from Ukraine do not come to Germany in large numbers — in increasing numbers — but that they serve their country,” Merz said Thursday. “They are needed there.”
His comments come amid growing concerns in Germany — particularly within Merz’s conservative ranks — that public support for the Ukrainian cause could wane if young male Ukrainians are seen to be avoiding military service by coming to Germany.Following the relaxation of Ukrainian exit rules over the summer, the number of young Ukrainian men aged 18 to 22 entering Germany rose from 19 per week in mid-August to between 1,400 and 1,800 per week in October, according to German media reports citing the German interior ministry.
Markus Söder, Bavaria’s conservative premier and an ally of Merz, proposed restrictions on the EU’s so-called Temporary Protection Directive if Kyiv doesn’t voluntarily reduce arrivals. The rules provide Ukrainians with an automatic protected status.
Germany is one of Ukraine’s staunchest allies within the EU. The country has hosted over 1.2 million Ukrainian refugees since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 and is its biggest donor in military aid after the U.S. in absolute numbers.
Members of Merz’s ruling coalition fear that the growing presence of young Ukrainian men in Germany will be turned into a political flash point by members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, who criticize the government’s ongoing support for Kyiv.
The ascending AfD, now polling first, has long demanded a stop to welfare payments to Ukrainians. Around 490,000 Ukrainian citizens of working age receive long-term unemployment benefits in Germany, according to data from the country’s employment agency.
Merz’s coalition — which is under increasing fiscal pressure and generally wants to reduce welfare spending — is working on a draft law that would cut the right to such benefits for Ukrainians and encourage work.
“In Germany, the transfer payments for these refugees will be such that the incentives to work are greater than the incentives in the transfer system,” Merz said Thursday.
In the same phone conversation, Merz also urged Zelenskyy to sort out the country’s corruption problems as Kyiv faces the fallout of a massive scandal involving kickbacks — another development that German officials fear could undermine public support for the embattled country.
BY NETTE NÖSTLINGER AND LAURA HÜLSEMANNBERLIN — German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to curb the flow of young Ukrainian men to Germany and ensure they stay to defend their country.
“In a lengthy telephone conversation today, I asked the Ukrainian president to ensure that young men in particular from Ukraine do not come to Germany in large numbers — in increasing numbers — but that they serve their country,” Merz said Thursday. “They are needed there.”
His comments come amid growing concerns in Germany — particularly within Merz’s conservative ranks — that public support for the Ukrainian cause could wane if young male Ukrainians are seen to be avoiding military service by coming to Germany.Following the relaxation of Ukrainian exit rules over the summer, the number of young Ukrainian men aged 18 to 22 entering Germany rose from 19 per week in mid-August to between 1,400 and 1,800 per week in October, according to German media reports citing the German interior ministry.
Markus Söder, Bavaria’s conservative premier and an ally of Merz, proposed restrictions on the EU’s so-called Temporary Protection Directive if Kyiv doesn’t voluntarily reduce arrivals. The rules provide Ukrainians with an automatic protected status.
Germany is one of Ukraine’s staunchest allies within the EU. The country has hosted over 1.2 million Ukrainian refugees since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 and is its biggest donor in military aid after the U.S. in absolute numbers.
Members of Merz’s ruling coalition fear that the growing presence of young Ukrainian men in Germany will be turned into a political flash point by members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, who criticize the government’s ongoing support for Kyiv.
The ascending AfD, now polling first, has long demanded a stop to welfare payments to Ukrainians. Around 490,000 Ukrainian citizens of working age receive long-term unemployment benefits in Germany, according to data from the country’s employment agency.
Merz’s coalition — which is under increasing fiscal pressure and generally wants to reduce welfare spending — is working on a draft law that would cut the right to such benefits for Ukrainians and encourage work.
“In Germany, the transfer payments for these refugees will be such that the incentives to work are greater than the incentives in the transfer system,” Merz said Thursday.
In the same phone conversation, Merz also urged Zelenskyy to sort out the country’s corruption problems as Kyiv faces the fallout of a massive scandal involving kickbacks — another development that German officials fear could undermine public support for the embattled country.
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