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BackLithuanian FM: Europe Should Revisit Frozen Russian Assets for Ukraine Aid
Lithuanian FM: Europe Should Revisit Frozen Russian Assets for Ukraine Aid
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Politico EU5/23/2026World2 min read

Lithuanian FM: Europe Should Revisit Frozen Russian Assets for Ukraine Aid

Quick Look

  • Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys urged Europe to reconsider using frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine financially and pressure Moscow into peace talks.
  • He stated that while a recent loan package was a step, frozen assets represent a more substantial resource and leverage for negotiations.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Europe previously considered using frozen Russian assets for Ukraine but opted for a loan package due to legal and political concerns from member states like Belgium and Hungary. Hungary later lifted its veto on the loan.

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Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys said Europe should put frozen Russian assets back on the table as it looks for ways to sustain Ukraine financially and increase pressure on Moscow to negotiate a peace deal.

Speaking at the POLITICO Speakeasy at Prague’s GLOBSEC on Saturday, Budrys said last year’s agreement on a €90 billion loan for Ukraine was a useful step, but not a final answer to Kyiv’s long-term needs.

“It’s not the end,” Budrys said of the frozen assets debate, arguing that Russian state assets immobilized in Europe remain “the real resource of support to Ukraine” and “the real leverage to force Russia to negotiate.”

The EU ultimately opted for a €90 billion interest-free loan for Ukraine for 2026 and 2027, financed through EU borrowing rather than the direct use of frozen Russian sovereign assets, after the asset plan ran into legal concerns from Belgium and political resistance from Hungary amongst other countries.

Hungary later lifted its veto on the loan after Viktor Orbán was voted out of office, clearing the way for approval, but the compromise left the frozen-assets question unresolved: EU leaders reserved the right to use the assets for repayment if Russia does not pay reparations.

Budrys said the issue had effectively been postponed by the loan deal, but should now return to the political agenda. Asked whether he wanted frozen assets back on the table, he replied: “Yes.”

“I’m looking forward to discussing it,” he said. “It’s not closed.”

Budrys argued that Ukraine will continue to need major financing even after the current support package runs its course. “Who believes that there will be no need for money for the upcoming years after these two years?” he said, adding that Kyiv still faces funding gaps for security and defense needs this year.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The EU will likely revisit discussions on using frozen Russian assets for Ukraine.

    Likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will the EU agree to put frozen Russian assets back on the negotiation table?
  • What legal and political hurdles remain for utilizing these assets?
  • How will Ukraine address its security and defense funding gaps this year?
  • What are the specific financial needs of Ukraine beyond the current support package?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Politico EU.

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