The use of frozen Russian assets for security for Europe to help fund Ukraine's defence in the war has been achieved by an EU decision. Now what?
Huge questions hang over the idea, from security to logistics, given the fierce fighting on the front lines and the daily Russian aerial assaults on Ukraine’s cities.
A "historic" move to help Ukraine with frozen Russian assets is a "tall order", Belgium's PM says - but he didn't rule it out ...
Kaja Kallas says concessions are needed, whether that means limiting Moscow's army, or curbing its military budget.
EU agrees indefinite freeze on €210bn of Russian assets - Ukraine’s ambassador to Washington insisted the meeting ‘only covered national security related issues’ ...
Relations between the US and Europe crumple further over Trump’s national security strategy and pressure on Ukraine ...
After almost four years of Russia's full-scale war, Kyiv is running out of cash, and needs an estimated €135.7bn over the ...
The EU wants to keep Ukraine financed and fighting as it sees Russia's invasion as a threat to its own security ...
The EU freezes €210 billion in Russian assets, clearing the way for a reparations-backed loan to Ukraine for military and ...
Months after a ceasefire, Palestinians who lost limbs in Gaza remain trapped by shortages of prosthetics and slow medical evacuations ...
EU Commissioner for Defence and Space Andrius Kubilius has warned that Russia could be ready to "test" Europe in a conflict ...
Now, Nebius is an AI infrastructure company that offers large-scale clusters of Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) ...
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