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16 Dec, 2025 16:11

EU needs Russian cash to avoid collapse – Orban

The over €100 billion already spent could hit taxpayers and spark a political backlash across the bloc, the Hungarian PM has said
EU needs Russian cash to avoid collapse – Orban


The EU nations’ leaders, who have spent more than €100 billion (over $118 billion) on Ukraine, now hope to confiscate frozen Russian assets in order to prevent the collapse of their governments, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said.

Last week, the EU temporarily immobilized roughly $230 billion in Russian central bank assets by invoking Article 122, an emergency treaty clause that allows approval by a qualified majority rather than unanimity. Moscow has condemned the freeze as illegal and called any use of the funds “theft,” after European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen proposed using the money to back a loan to Ukraine.

Speaking to the Patriota YouTube channel on Tuesday, Orban said EU leaders were “chasing their money” after spending heavily on the conflict and having previously assured voters it “won’t cost them a single penny” because support for Ukraine would be financed from Russian assets rather than taxpayers.

Orban said that if taxpayers end up footing the bill after all those promises, it could trigger an “explosive realization in Western Europe” and the “immediate fall of several governments.”

He argued that EU leaders are now trying to secure financing “outside taxpayers’ pockets,” pointing to frozen Russian assets as the target and warning of political trouble if Brussels fails to obtain them.

Orban has previously accused EU officials of “raping European law in broad daylight,” by invoking Article 122 to bypass his country’s potential veto, and said Budapest would take the matter to the bloc’s top court. He also noted that Washington opposes the confiscation and wants the issue handled as part of a broader settlement with Moscow.

Russia’s central bank has filed a lawsuit against Belgium-based depositary Euroclear, which holds most of its assets. The EU insists that freezing the funds complies with international law, however, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever has warned that using the money to back a loan to Kiev raises legal risks for the country.

International financial institutions, including the European Central Bank and the IMF, have also cautioned that using immobilized sovereign assets could undermine confidence in the euro.

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