€140 Billion in Frozen Russian Assets

A solution to Ukraine's needs and Europe's security

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Responding to PM De Wever's concerns

Responding to Prime Minister De Wever's concerns about using frozen Russian assets for Ukraine

The Uncomfortable Truth De Wever Won't Address

Belgium Is Already Under Attack - RIGHT NOW

Since October 2024, Russian drones, hacker attacks have disrupted:

✈️
Brussels, Charleroi, Liège airports
Operations halted
πŸͺ–
Belgian military bases
Royal Military School
⛴️
Port of Antwerp
Europe's 2nd largest port
☒️
Doel nuclear plant
Five drones spotted
Map of Suspected Russian Activity in Europe

πŸ’° Cost: €2+ million per airport incident (direct costs only)

The Pattern Across Europe:

Do we fear theoretical litigation more than the documented cost of Russian aggression happening now?

De Wever's Impossible Logic

He Blocks Every Solution While Claiming to Support Ukraine

What He Says The Evidence
βœ“ "Ukraine needs urgent funding - before end of year" TRUE - €135bn gap for 2026-2027
βœ— "Russian assets too risky to use" BUT ignores how Euroclear already compensated investors from the assets
βœ— "Coalition should fund it directly instead" BUT admits: "Phone calls received: zero. Actually zero."
βœ— "EU debt better alternative" BUT expects all EU countries to tax citizens harder
βœ“ "I'm ready, willing, able to do whatever it takes" SO... WHAT EXACTLY?

The Logical Trap:

If Ukraine truly needs urgent funding (βœ“) AND all alternatives are blocked (βœ—βœ—βœ—), THEN being "ready, willing, able" requires accepting the only viable option: the Reparations Loan.

These positions cannot all be true. De Wever is blocking all solutions while claiming to seek one.

"Number of phone calls I got since proposing [coalition funding]: tends to zero. It actually is zero." - Bart De Wever

De Wever's Three "Problems" - Already Solved

Every Concern Has an Answer He's Ignoring

❓ Problem 1: "Is this even legal?"

De Wever claims: "Nobody has done this before - we're in uncharted waters"

The Reality:

  • βœ“ Legal framework exists: ARSIWA (Articles on State Responsibility) - countermeasures are lawful when aggressor violates international law
  • βœ“ Historical precedents: Iraq-Kuwait ($50bn), Iran, Argentina, Yugoslavia, Libya, Germany, Japan, Italy
  • βœ“ Belgium itself used such a mechanism: Received war reparations after WWI and WWII
  • βœ“ It's not even confiscation: Reparations Loan uses assets in a substitution/swap mechanism, not seizes them

πŸ”’ Problem 2: "Guarantees - cash must be available immediately"

De Wever claims: "If Russia wins a claim, money must return instantly or markets panic"

The Reality:

  • βœ“ ECB President Lagarde said "CAN be done" with conditions (not "cannot be done")
  • βœ“ Loan structure preserves assets: They're used in a substitution/swap mechanism, not spent
  • βœ“ Russia claiming return takes YEARS: Requires (1) ending aggression, (2) winning arbitration, or (3) favorable peace treaty
  • βœ“ Guarantee mechanisms exist: Phased, conditional, insured structures

βš–οΈ Problem 3: "Risks left with Belgium"

De Wever claims: "Taking Putin's money and leaving risks with us"

The Reality:

  • βœ“ Investment tribunal victory extremely unlikely: CBR chances "extremely low" per legal analysis
  • βœ“ EU already blocks enforcement: 15th sanctions package prohibits recognition of arbitral awards
  • βœ“ EU took GREATER risks for LESS: Used Russian private assets to compensate investors (higher legal risk) - Ukraine's survival warrants equal tolerance
  • βœ“ Multi-country participation exists: G7 already using windfall profits; UK willing to seize russian assets to send to Ukraine; burden-sharing mechanisms available

The Bottom Line: De Wever presents "problems" while ignoring that solutions exist. The question isn't whether answers exist - they do. The question is whether Belgium will lead or obstruct.

What Belgium Refuses to See

The EU Already Did This for Private Investors - Why Not for Ukraine?

What Happened in December 2024 & July 2025:

Belgium, Euroclear, and the EU took much greater legal risks to protect European investors:

Action What They Did Legal Risk Level
Apr 2025 Used cash from Russian National Securities Depository to compensate European investors HIGHER RISK
July 2025 Blocked enforcement of arbitral awards related to such actions Novel legal territory

Why Private Investor Action Was RISKIER:

  1. Russian individuals/companies can invoke human rights protection (CBR cannot - it's 100% governmental)
  2. Connection to aggression less obvious than Central Bank's direct role
  3. Created precedent for using Russian assets anyway
πŸ“Š

Private European Investors

HIGHER legal risk

βœ“ EU acted decisively

β†’
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦

Ukraine's Survival

LOWER legal risk

βœ— Belgium blocks it

The Question for Belgium:

If the EU can accept greater legal uncertainty to protect private investors' portfolios, why can't it accept lesser risk to ensure Ukraine's survival and Europe's security?

This isn't about legal risk. Belgium already demonstrated it can manage legal risk when it wants to. This is about political will.

πŸ“š The Details Behind the Arguments

The first 5 slides present the core case. What follows provides deeper technical support, additional context, and responds to secondary arguments.

Deep Dive: The Legal Framework

ARSIWA and the Doctrine of Countermeasures

ARSIWA (Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts)

  • Codified customary international law
  • When state commits serious wrongdoing, other states may take countermeasures
  • Requirements: (1) Proportional, (2) Temporary, (3) Aim to force compliance
βš”οΈ
Aggression
(jus ad bellum violation)
βš–οΈ
War Crimes
(peremptory norms)
❌
Refusal to Pay
Compensation
🏒
Seizure of Western
Assets in Russia

Why This Qualifies:

  • Proportional: ~€300bn vs. €486bn+ reconstruction costs
  • Temporary: Until Russia complies and pays reparations
  • Legitimate aim: Force Russia to end aggression and compensate

Key Principle: Ex iniuria ius non oritur - "Law does not arise from wrongdoing"

Deep Dive: How the Reparations Loan Works

Technical Mechanism Explained

Current Situation

  • €140bn Russian assets β†’ Euroclear β†’ cash at ECB
  • Windfall profits β†’ G7 loan payments

Reparations Loan Proposal

  • Assets are used in a substitution/swap mechanism (not spent)
  • the cash held by Euroclear would be transferred to the EU Commission
  • the Commission would then issue an interest-free reparations loan to Ukraine
  • Ukraine receives loan, repays only after receiving reparations from Russia
  • If Russia somehow wins claim, guarantee mechanisms activate

Key Point: This is a loan structure, not consumption of assets

Comparison to G7 Loan:

  • G7 loan: Uses only windfall profits (~€3bn/year interest)
  • Reparations Loan: Uses full principal in a substitution/swap mechanism for much larger amounts

Deep Dive: Historical Precedents

"Nobody Has Done This Before" - Really?

Case Year Amount Mechanism Outcome
Iraq β†’ Kuwait 1991 $50 billion UN Compensation Commission Assets used for reconstruction
Germany & Japan 1945-1952 Extensive Allied reparations programs Post-war reconstruction funded
Italy assets 1954 Significant ICJ case, assets used Reparations paid
Argentina 2000s Various Court-ordered seizures Sovereign debt disputes
Iran 2016 $1.75bn US court orders Terror victim compensation

πŸ‡§πŸ‡ͺ Belgium's Own History:

  • Post-WWI: Received substantial reparations from Germany under Treaty of Versailles
  • Post-WWII: Benefited from Allied reparations program
  • Belgium was rebuilt with international assistance and German reparations

The Irony: Belgium benefited from the same principle it now questions. Will it deny Ukraine the justice Belgium itself received?

Deep Dive: Investment Tribunal Risk Analysis

Detailed Legal Probability Assessment

The Belgium-Luxembourg-USSR BIT (1989):

  • General language that might allow CBR to file as "investor" (uncertain)
  • But CBR is 100% governmental - not typical investor

Why Russia Would Lose (Based on Case Law):

1️⃣ General International Law Takes Precedence

Investment tribunals follow ICJ approach: investment disputes can't be separated from general international law. Russia's peremptory norm violations must be considered.

2️⃣ Countermeasures Doctrine Recognized

Tribunals accept: "host State is entitled to react to another State's breach by temporarily suspending protection of the latter's investors"

3️⃣ Non-Compensable Expropriation

Criteria: (a) legitimate public purpose, (b) non-discriminatory, (c) proportional, (d) good faith. Using Russian assets meets all criteria.

4️⃣ Russia's Own Actions

Already seized European assets (Total, Danone, Carlsberg). Cannot claim protection while violating same norms.

5️⃣ EU Blocking Enforcement

15th sanctions package prohibits recognition of arbitral awards. Russia cannot enforce judgment in EU even if it won.

Probability Assessment: Chance of Russia winning = Extremely Low

Secondary Arguments: Quick Rebuttals

Other Objections and Their Answers

"Coalition should pay instead"

De Wever: "€45bn/year - coalition of willing should become coalition of bill"

His own admission: "Phone calls received: zero. It actually is zero."

βœ— Rebuttal: Why propose dead alternative? Why should EU taxpayers pay for Russian aggression?

"Spend euro once - save for reconstruction"

De Wever: "Use for war now = nothing left for reconstruction later"

βœ— Rebuttal: (1) No reconstruction if Ukraine loses; (2) Loan structure preserves assets; (3) Russia owes €486bn+ regardless; (4) Protects assets while Ukraine loses = protecting nothing

"Need non-Euro countries involved"

De Wever: "Christine Lagarde recommended multi-country participation"

βœ— Rebuttal: G7 already participating with windfall profits; Eurozone hosts majority of assets; leadership doesn't require unanimity; delay for global consensus sacrifices Ukraine's immediate needs

"Sanctions renewal risk (Hungary veto)"

De Wever: "If sanctions fall, 3 seconds later Russia claims money"

βœ— Rebuttal: (1) 26-nation model working for 3 years; (2) Even if sanctions fell, Russia needs years to claim (peace treaty or arbitration); (3) Using assets makes sanctions MORE durable (higher stakes)

"EU debt alternative better"

De Wever: "We did it for COVID"

βœ— Rebuttal: Requires same unanimity (Hungary). Increases Member State debt. COVID was caused by a virus; This war is caused by Russian aggression - use aggressor's assets.

πŸ’‘ The Positive Case for Action

Why the Reparations Loan is the best path forward for Europe and Ukraine

Why the Reparations Loan Is the Best Option

Three Options - One Clear Choice

Option Speed Cost to EU Member State Debt Political Feasibility
1. Direct Grants Slow High Increases Low (budget constraints)
2. EU-Backed Loan Medium Medium Increases Medium (unanimity needed)
3. Reparations Loan Fast Minimal No increase Highest

Why Reparations Loan Wins:

  • βœ“ Cheapest: No burden on national budgets
  • βœ“ Fastest: No new borrowing authorization needed
  • βœ“ Most just: Aggressor's assets fund victim's defense
  • βœ“ Most coherent: Direct link between Russian aggression and accountability

The Strategic Imperative

What Happens If Europe Hesitates Again?

1990

Europe hesitated β†’ Yugoslavia

2008

Europe hesitated β†’ Georgia

2014

Europe hesitated β†’ Crimea, Donbas

2022

Russia launched full invasion

2025

Europe's choice moment

Each time Europe delayed, the cost grew

Today's Stakes:

  • Ukraine's €135bn financing gap (2026-2027) is immediate
  • Russian hybrid warfare already costs billions and escalating
  • Moscow assumes it can wear down Western unity
  • A reparations loan challenges both battlefield and financial attrition

The Choice: Lead now and set terms, or pay much more later under worse conditions

What Message Does Europe Send?

The Signal to the World

If Europe Returns the Money to Russia:

  • ☐ Aggression pays
  • ☐ International law has no teeth
  • ☐ Threats work better than compliance
  • ☐ Europe lacks resolve to defend itself

If Europe Uses Assets for Ukraine:

  • βœ“ Aggression has consequences
  • βœ“ International law means something
  • βœ“ Victims receive justice and reparations
  • βœ“ Europe can defend its security and values

Moscow's Reaction:

"If we touch the money, we would feel consequences until eternity"

  • This means Russia fears EU unity on asset confiscation
  • Moscow's pressure is a sign of policy effectiveness, not a reason to back down

Belgium's Historical Moment

A Chance to Lead Again

πŸ“œ
Then: Benefited from War Reparations
πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί
Then: Led Europe in Building Institutions
πŸ›οΈ
Now: Became the Heart of European Decision-Making
πŸ’°
Now: Hosts Majority of Frozen Assets

Belgium's Current Position:

  • Hosts majority of frozen Russian assets (Euroclear)
  • Holds "Europe's key financial leverage over the Kremlin" (De Wever's own words)
  • Can shape how the mechanism works by leading rather than blocking

"By promoting robust collective EU action at the European Council meeting in December, Prime Minister Bart De Wever can play a decisive leadership role in helping to end Russia's war against Ukraine and restore peace and justice in Europe."

The Real Cost-Benefit Analysis

What Are We Actually Comparing?

De Wever Focuses On
(Speculative Future Risks)

  • Possible litigation Russia might win (extremely low probability)
  • Theoretical market reaction to guarantee structure
  • Hypothetical Russian counter-measures

De Wever Ignores
(Concrete Present Costs)

  • €2+ million per drone disruption (already happening)
  • Billions in ongoing sabotage across Europe
  • Ukraine's potential collapse without funding
  • Emboldened Russia escalating hybrid warfare
  • Message to other aggressors that Europe lacks resolve

The Asymmetry: Documented costs in billions NOW vs. speculative legal risks with low probability LATER

Call to Action: What Should Belgium Do?

December Decision Points

Belgium should:

  1. Champion the Reparations Loan at December European Council
  2. Shape the guarantee mechanism through leadership rather than obstruction
  3. Mobilize European partners for collective guarantee structure
  4. Invoke Belgium's own history as beneficiary of war reparations
  5. Frame the choice clearly: Lead Europe's defense of Ukraine and international law, or enable Russian aggression through paralysis

What this looks like in practice:

  • Work with Commission on guarantee structure that addresses legitimate concerns
  • Coordinate with G7 partners on burden-sharing
  • Publicly commit to supporting Ukraine before December Council
  • Make the moral and strategic case to Belgian public

What You Can Do

Make Russia Pay - Join the Demonstration

πŸ“£ Join the Demonstration!

Friday, December 12th

⏰ 10:00 AM

πŸ“ Rue de la Loi 175
(in front of the EU Council)

View Event Details β†’

BELGIUM, STOP BLOCKING THE REPARATION LOAN.
UKRAINIAN LIVES OVER PROFIT!

πŸ“°
For Journalists
πŸ‘₯
For Citizens
πŸ›οΈ
For Policymakers

πŸ“° For Journalists:

  • Cover the concrete costs Belgium already pays (drones, disruptions, sabotage)
  • Ask PM De Wever: "If all alternatives are blocked, what is your actual solution?"
  • Interview legal experts on the tribunal victory probability

πŸ‘₯ For Citizens:

  • Share the facts on social media
  • Sign petitions supporting the Reparations Loan
  • Contact your MPs and the Prime Minister's office
  • Mobilise Civil Society Organisations
  • Join the demonstration on December 12th!
See How β†’

πŸ›οΈ For Policymakers:

  • Cite historical precedents in parliamentary debates
  • Request detailed cost-benefit analysis comparing action vs. inaction
  • Build cross-party coalition for Belgian leadership

Belgium's Choice: Lead or Follow?

Prime Minister De Wever said Belgium holds "Europe's key financial leverage over the Kremlin."

The question is not whether Belgium will be affected by this decision.
Europe is already affected - Russian drones fly over Belgian territory now.

The question is: Will Belgium use its leverage to shape European security, or surrender it through inaction?

In 1990, 2008, and 2014, Europe hesitated.
Each time, war broke out and the cost grew.

History is watching. Belgium can lead Europe to justice and security, or be remembered as the country that returned money to its aggressor.

The time to act is now. December 2025.

Open Letter to Belgian Leadership

Dear Prime Minister Bart De Wever,
Dear Members of the Federal Parliament,

We, the undersigned Belgian citizens and residents, academics, lawyers, economists, former diplomats, and representatives of civil society, are writing to urge decisive leadership on the use of immobilised Russian state assets to support Ukraine and reinforce Europe's security.

As Belgium holds approximately €175 billion in cash (matured from bond holdings) of immobilised Russian Central Bank assets, accounting for almost two-thirds of all Russian assets immobilised worldwide, our country is in a uniquely influential position at a moment when Russia's war against Ukraine has direct implications for European stability and for Belgium's own security.

1. Belgium is increasingly targeted by hybrid threats

The recent disruptions at Belgian airports caused by drones, together with repeated detections near military installations, port areas, and critical infrastructure, signal a clear intensification of Russian hybrid operations in Western Europe.

These incidents are not isolated; they are part of a deliberate pattern of hybrid warfare aimed at creating economic damage, endangering citizens, and exerting pressure on our national security services.

In this context, it is essential that Europe strengthens its deterrence. Supporting Ukraine, currently containing Russia's military aggression, is both an act of solidarity and a measure of self-protection for EU member states, including Belgium. Putin has made clear he has no intention of pursuing genuine peace negotiations while Russia's war machine operates at full capacity and while he believes he can simply outlast Western support and drive us slowly apart. A multi-year financing package backed by frozen Russian assets eliminates this expectation, making the war more costly for the Kremlin and forcing it finally to take real negotiations seriously.

The proposed loan structure would provide multi-year predictable support without requiring annual budget negotiations, reducing political uncertainty and enabling more effective long-term defense planning. The mechanism for using frozen Russian assets isn't an escalation, it actually makes the war more costly for Russia and accelerates the incentive to pursue peace.

2. The European proposal is responsible, legally grounded, and urgently needed

The European Commission has proposed a mechanism, the 'reparations loan', that does not involve the seizure of Russian state assets, but allows their temporary substitution: the cash held by Euroclear would be transferred to the Commission, which would then issue an interest-free reparations loan to Ukraine (with financing costs effectively borne by Russia through the asset substitution mechanism). The original Russian assets would be repaid only after Russia ends its aggression and provides compensation for war damages.

International law provides a basis for such measures through the doctrine of countermeasures against states committing internationally wrongful acts, including grave breaches of obligations under the UN Charter (UN International Law Commission Articles on State Responsibility, Art. 22, 49-54). Historical practice demonstrates various approaches to frozen sovereign assets in contexts of aggression or serious international violations, including assets held following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait (under UNSC authorization), German and Japanese assets after World War II (under post-conflict settlements), and Iranian and Libyan assets frozen following determinations of state responsibility for terrorism.

Moreover, Belgian and European assets belonging to private companies were recently nationalized by Russia itself, which underlines the principle of ex iniuria ius non oritur: no right can be derived from an unlawful act. Belgium therefore has many counterarguments based on the highest international regulations in the event of arbitration.

With a sound legal foundation established, the central question becomes one of strategic judgment: which risk is greater, acting or failing to act?

3. The cost of inaction is already visible

Russian sabotage and cyber operations are already exacting a financial and security toll on Europe. The disruptions at Brussels and LiΓ¨ge airports alone caused between €1.5 and €3 million in direct losses only1.

Drones targeting transport hubs, energy facilities and military installations represent a growing threat. These incidents raise the question of how long Belgium can remain vulnerable without taking stronger measures.

Belgium now faces a clear choice. Will we return billions to a state actively undermining our national security, resources that may be used to intensify these attacks, or will we help Ukraine defend itself while strengthening Europe's deterrence and capacity for self-defence?

4. Belgium is not alone, solutions exist, and partners are ready

The Prime Minister's call for risk sharing is justified. Several EU member states, such as Germany, Finland, Sweden and the Baltic countries, have already expressed support for a joint guarantee framework. The United Kingdom, Canada and Japan are also exploring similar arrangements. A coordinated European guarantee framework would distribute any potential arbitration or enforcement costs across participating states, significantly reducing individual exposure while maximizing collective deterrence.

Belgium is not isolated. By taking a leadership role, our country can help shape a fair and robust reparation loan mechanism. Belgium has a long tradition of leading diplomatic progress within Europe and now has the opportunity to do so again.

We can drive efforts that strengthen Europe's defence, security and global influence while upholding international law and European values. The time to act is now.

We thank you for your attention to this urgent matter.
We sincerely hope that Belgium will rise to meet this moment, honouring its history and assuming the responsibility that its unique position confers.

1 Aviation24.be, "Drone incident above Belgium: economic damage likely runs into millions," Bart NoΓ«th, 5 November 2025. https://www.aviation24.be/miscellaneous/drones/incident-above-belgium-economic-damage-likely-runs-into-millions/ ↩

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About This Initiative

We advocate for the immediate utilization of immobilized Russian assets to support Ukraine's defense and reconstruction. With €140 billion frozen in European financial institutions—€175 billion matured at Euroclear in Belgium aloneβ€”Europe has the leverage it needs to end Russia's war of aggression and restore justice.

Our position is clear: The time for debate is over. Ukraine needs funding now. All alternative funding sources have been blocked. Belgium holds Europe's key financial leverage over the Kremlin, and must act in December 2025 to champion the Reparations Loan at the European Council.

This platform aggregates legal documents, financial reports, expert analyses, and evidence-based arguments to support our case. We counter the objections raised by Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever and others with comprehensive legal precedents, financial mechanisms, and strategic analysis.

Read our full case: Belgium's Pivotal Role in European Security - Why Belgium must lead Europe in using frozen Russian assets to defend Ukraine and international law.

Join the campaign: info@frozen-assets.eu