The Ukrainian leader has claimed he made such a proposal to the US president-elect during their phone conversation
Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has said he urged US President-elect Donald Trump to hand frozen Russian assets over to Kiev, to serve as a key security guarantee in potential peace negotiations between Moscow and Kiev.
Around $300 billion in Russian central bank funds were blocked by the West after the escalation between Russia and Ukraine in February 2022. More than two thirds of the sum is being held in the EU.
During his three-hour interview with US podcaster Lex Fridman on Sunday, Zelensky claimed that “Ukraine wants peace,” but stressed that in order to stop the fighting, Kiev needs security guarantees that would last beyond the four years that Trump will be in the White House.
He said he discussed the issue with the president-elect during their phone call in November, just days after the US election.
During Trump’s term, “a lot of money for... military industry, in Ukraine or in Europe, with India, Saudi Arabia, and the US” will be required, the Ukrainian leader insisted.
“So the question is where you will get it. My answer was to Trump. I said this is one of the security guarantees. Take $300 billion of frozen Russian assets. We will take it. Take money, what we need for our domestic production, and we will buy all the weapons from the US,” he said.
Such a deal “will be very good for your industry, for the US. We will put money there. Russian money, not Ukrainian, not European…. They have to pay for this… This is one of the security guarantees,” Zelensky explained.
Last month, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico accused the Ukrainian leader of trying to bribe him with €500 million from frozen Russian assets in order to persuade Bratislava to support Kiev’s bid to join NATO.
According to Fico, Zelensky made the offer in an attempt to sweeten the pill for Slovakia, which depends on Russian energy, after Kiev’s decision not to prolong a gas transit deal with Moscow. The Slovak premier said that he refused the “absurd” proposal.
Russian officials have repeatedly said the seizure of its funds would amount to theft and further undermine global trust in the Western financial system. Moscow has also warned that if necessary, it will respond in kind to such a move by the US and EU.