THE HAGUE, Netherlands — A core question for European Union leaders discussing whether to use frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine is whether the idea is legally sound. But even if they approve the plan, Russia has limited options for challenging it in court.
The 27-nation bloc's leaders are set to decide on whether to use tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian Central Bank assets to underwrite a loan to meet Ukraine's military and financial needs over the next two years. The bulk of the assets are held in Belgium-based financial clearinghouse Euroclear.
Belgium said Thursday that it wants ironclad guarantees that it will be protected from retaliation — legal, financial or otherwise — and that's become a major stumbling block.
Russia tries targeting Euroclear
Russia's Central Bank filed a complaint last week at Moscow's Arbitration Court against Euroclear, trying to recover the assets that have been frozen since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.
The central bank said in a statement that the lawsuit was over the ''illegal blocking and use of its assets, in the amount of the illegally withheld assets and lost profits.''
Should the central bank prevail, it would struggle to collect on any judgment. For more than a decade, the EU has banned enforcement of Russian court judgments involving the frozen assets.
Belgium has voiced repeated concerns about its liability under a 1989 treaty with Russia encouraging economic ties between the countries. Belgian Prime Minister Bart de Wever said on Thursday that any EU plan must take into account the ''financial risks arising from the bilateral investment treaty.''