The Mercury News Weekend

U.S., Europe eyeing Russian assets to aid Ukraine as funding dries up

- By David E. Sanger and Alan Rappeport

The Biden administra­tion is quietly signaling new support for seizing more than $300 billion in Russian central bank assets stashed in Western nations and has begun urgent discussion­s with allies about using the funds to aid Ukraine's war effort at a moment when financial support is waning, according to senior American and European officials.

Until recently, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had argued that without action by Congress, seizing the funds was “not something that is legally permissibl­e in the United States.” There has also been concern among some top U.S. officials that nations around the world would hesitate to keep their funds at the New York Federal Reserve, or in dollars, if the United States establishe­d a precedent for seizing the money.

But the administra­tion, in coordinati­on with the Group of 7 nations, has begun taking another look at whether it can use its existing authoritie­s or if it should seek congressio­nal action to use the funds. Support for such legislatio­n has been building in Congress, giving the Biden administra­tion optimism that it could be granted the necessary authority.

The talks among finance ministers, central bankers, diplomats and lawyers have intensifie­d in recent weeks, officials said, with the Biden administra­tion pressing Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan to come up with a strategy by Feb. 24, the second anniversar­y of the invasion.

The more than $300 billion of Russian assets under discussion have already been out of Moscow's

control for more than a year. After the invasion of Ukraine, the United States, along with Europe and Japan, used sanctions to freeze the assets, denying Russia access to its internatio­nal reserves.

But seizing the assets would take matters a step further and require careful legal considerat­ion.

President Joe Biden has not yet signed off, and many of the details remain under discussion. Policymake­rs

must determine if the money will be channeled directly to Ukraine or used to its benefit in other ways.

They are also discussing what kinds of guardrails might be associated with the funds, such as whether the money could be used only for reconstruc­tion and budgetary purposes to support Ukraine's economy, or whether — like the funds Congress is debating — it could be spent directly on the military effort.

 ?? TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainian forces receive a delivery of artillery shells near the Kupiansk front line on Nov. 17. With current funding nearly exhausted, American officials have said they are scrambling to find ways to provide aid for Ukraine, which is continuing its war against Russia.
TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainian forces receive a delivery of artillery shells near the Kupiansk front line on Nov. 17. With current funding nearly exhausted, American officials have said they are scrambling to find ways to provide aid for Ukraine, which is continuing its war against Russia.

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