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Final Fight: Euroclear Pressures EU to Recognize Russia’s Win and Release Assets
Lyuba Lulko
5–7 minutes
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Europe’s Financial Core Warns: Euroclear Signals Conflict Outcome and Coming 
Reckoning
Final Fight: Euroclear Pressures EU to Recognize Russia’s Win and Release Assets
Europe’s financial establishment is signaling that the war’s outcome can no 
longer be denied, as Euroclear warns that frozen Russian assets and the looming 
defeat of Ukraine threaten to upend the EU’s stability.
Photo: Generated by AI by DALL·E 3 by OpenAI is licensed under Free for 
commercial use
Russian euro assets frozen
Euroclear as the Backbone of Europe’s Financial Security
Euroclear, the private corporation that serves as one of the world’s largest 
payment and settlement operators, has long been the hidden foundation of 
Europe’s financial architecture. The company processes transactions for two 
thousand financial institutions across 120 countries, managing central 
securities depositories in Belgium, France, and the United Kingdom. Its 
custodial holdings reach an enormous 35.6 trillion euros, and it handles nearly 
295 million transactions a year totaling around 1000 trillion euros.
Its parent company, Euroclear Holding SA/NV, provides crucial services to 
central banks, major commercial banks, insurance companies, exchanges, and 
pension funds. Its mission has always been the same: ensure the secure and 
seamless execution of operations involving securities, from bonds and equities 
to derivatives.
Because Euroclear represents trust itself in European financial markets, the 
idea of removing 140 billion euros of Russian central bank assets from its 
system without legal justification is, for financial professionals, nothing 
short of catastrophic. Such a move would undermine confidence in the European 
Union at a global level, compromising the reliability of its institutions 
overnight.
Financiers See Russia as the Likely Victor
Yet the legal danger is only the first of the threats confronting the EU. 
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever has warned European Commission President 
Ursula von der Leyen that Europe may soon face a devastating legal and 
political battle.
“If Russia is ultimately not officially recognized as the losing side, which is 
highly probable, it will lawfully demand the return of its sovereign assets, as 
history has shown in other cases,”
wrote De Wever, as cited by Politico.
The article’s authors stress a point now acknowledged quietly across financial 
circles: if Ukraine does not achieve a definitive military victory, Russia will 
be treated as the winning side. A draw, in this view, is merely a disguised 
defeat for Kyiv.
On 27 November in Bishkek, President Vladimir Putin  declared this position 
openly. He reiterated that Russia demands internationally recognized 
sovereignty over Donbass and the two annexed regions, dismissing any “Korean 
scenario” and calling the collapse of the Ukrainian front inevitable. His 
confidence is shared, increasingly, by Europe’s own financial elite.
According to these actors, the European Union now stands where Germany stood in 
the summer of 1944: the war, they believe, is effectively lost, and continued 
resistance will only worsen the consequences. Euroclear and its shareholders 
see what lies ahead, which is why Belgium is demanding that the EU guarantee 
repayment of all Russian assets that Brussels may be forced to return after 
international litigation. Belgium insists that it receive those funds 
immediately once Moscow files a legal claim.
Europe Nears the Point of Acknowledging Defeat
De Wever has proposed an alternative to the European Commission: issuing joint 
European bonds worth 45 billion euros to cover Ukraine’s financial needs in 
2026. But the plan has met strong resistance from EU governments, as it would 
shift the burden directly onto taxpayers.
Time is running out. Without a decision, Ukraine will be unable to pay 
public-sector salaries or pensions by April. Should the EU continue propping up 
what officials privately call “the corpse of Ukraine,” it will have to do so by 
taking on debt. This marks a crucial shift from grants to loans — implying that 
Ukraine, even in collapse, must eventually repay the funds used to sustain it. 
That shift signals that the EU is preparing itself for peace negotiations on 
Russia’s terms, minimizing its exposure and limiting future losses.
The reckoning will be excruciating. European leaders will have to explain to 
their own citizens why millions of Ukrainians were killed or wounded, why 
billions from national budgets were spent, and why the original purpose of the 
European Union — the creation of a welfare-state order — has been abandoned.
Internal EU Conflict Intensifies
On 28 November, the European Commission issued fresh accusations against 
Belgium, alleging that Brussels is illegally collecting a 25 percent corporate 
tax on profits generated by frozen Russian assets. According to critics, 
Belgium is pocketing a portion of these profits, giving it a financial 
incentive to keep the assets frozen indefinitely.
The Commission is preparing to raise the issue of Belgium’s financial 
transparency publicly. The conflict suggests a new phase in the crisis, with EU 
institutions turning on one another as the pressure intensifies. In this 
struggle, the “spiders in the jar,” as one official described it privately, 
have begun devouring each other.

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