Skip to content
  • Home
  • Journalists
    • Headlines
  • Community
    • Businesses
    • Jobs
    • Learning
    • Marketplace
  • Store
(@)

Europe Vowed to Make Russia Pay for the War. It’s Not That Easy.

Confiscating Russian state assets frozen by the United States and Europe could breach international law and set a dangerous precedent, experts say.

Monika Pronczuk
Author: Monika Pronczuk

Written by

Monika Pronczuk

in

Central Bank of Russia, Compensation for Damages (Law), Currency, De Croo, Alexander, Euro (Currency), Euroclear, Europe, European Central Bank, European Commission, European Union, Foreign Investments, International Court of Justice (UN), International Monetary Fund, International Relations, Law and Legislation, Politics and Government, Reparations, Russia, Russian Invasion of Ukraine (2022), Security Council (UN), Ukraine, United Nations, United States, United States International Relations, von der Leyen, Ursula, World Bank
←Donald Trump Reacts To New Charges In Classified Documents Case
Cringe: Sean Hannity Riffs On Nancy Mace’s Sexy Confession At Prayer Breakfast→

More posts

  • Protesters, leaders push back against DHS over Newark detention facility conditions

  • Goldman and Lander spar hard over Israel

  • Snowflake climbs after Q1 results top expectations, guidance gets a boost

  • Synopsys drops despite better than expected Q2 results, big boost to full-year guidance

About Us


Support Us

Trademark & Copyright 1998 – 2025 · MOSAEC

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube