EU’s Financial Strategies for Ukraine: A Decisive 2026-2027 Outlook
- European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen has urged EU member states to consider new funding mechanisms to cover Ukraine's financial shortfall, estimated at €135.7 billion for 2026-27.
- Von Der Leyen proposed three options for funding: grants from member states, limited loans from EU borrowing, and loans connected to frozen Russian assets.
- Ukraine's financial needs are estimated at €70 billion in 2026 and €64 billion in 2027, according to Von Der Leyen.
- Von Der Leyen stressed the importance of ensuring that funding begins before the new long-term budget is adopted in 2028, as Ukraine's defense and budget needs remain unmet.
28 Articles
28 Articles
The Ukrainian leader in Paris buys 100 jets Rafale and new Samp-T batteries. Von der Leyen: "All'Ukraine needs another 70 billion"
In Belgium, around 140 billion euros of Russian central bank money are frozen. According to Ursula von der Leyen's plans, these are to be used for loans to Ukraine. Belgium, however, made a condition for this, which the EU Commission President apparently now meets.
EU’s Financial Strategies for Ukraine: A Decisive 2026-2027 Outlook
The European Commission proposed three options to fund Ukraine's needs in 2026-2027. Ukraine requires 135.7 billion euros to sustain military and other needs if Russia ends its war by 2026. The proposals include grants, EU market borrowing, and loans tied to Russian reparations. EU leaders will discuss these options in December.
The Ukrainian leadership is sucking up Europe, and Brussels is rewarding it
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