Europe should seize Russia’s frozen assets now

In terms of territorial integrity, sovereignty, and security, the Trump administration is now deciding what the future holds for Ukraine and, consequently, for Europe. Even if it means breaking long-standing international norms that prohibit the recognition of territory acquired through military occupation, Washington wants to reach a resolution to put an end to the full-fledged conflict Russia launched in February 2022 against Ukraine.

However, there is much more at stake than those principles, which Washington has rarely given priority in its own foreign policy, for Europe in general and the European Union in particular.

The bloc’s security and political concerns are at the center of preventing Putin from engaging in additional aggression and guaranteeing stability for Ukraine both politically and economically. Any resolution to the conflict that doesn’t succeed in either would put the bloc at risk for its long-term security.

All of this must be managed while keeping in mind that the Trump administration does not further undermine European security by once more questioning its commitment to NATO’s security infrastructure. However, Europe has already begun to acknowledge these concerns, albeit reluctantly. 23 NATO members agreed to increase core defence spending to at least 3.5% of GDP by 2035, with another 1.5% going toward building their defense industrial bases and boosting their defense spending goals by the end of last year.

According to the Ukraine Support Tracker, Europe has already surpassed the US for the first time since June 2022 in total military aid, with 72 billion euros ($83.95 billion) being allocated as opposed to Washington’s 65 billion euros ($77.55 billion) by the end of April.

However, the increased European support does not make up for the stagnant US funding, regardless of the outcome of the Trump administration’s efforts to entice Ukraine into a negotiating position that Putin might be willing to accept. The West’s fiscal support is only one component of the equation, and Kyiv is also relying on it to keep its government running. And with Russia’s continued airstrikes and assaults, the cost of reconstruction only increases. The World Bank estimated it to be worth $524 billion (506 billion euros), or 280 percent of Kyiv’s GDP by 2024, according to its World Bank projections in February.

Despite agreeing to his demands on trade and NATO funding and military support for Ukraine and signing agreements that have seen the US’s average tariff rate on imports from the EU and UK rise sharply, Europe runs the risk of being left to Trump’s will.

However, Europe has a clear choice to make to ensure that Kyiv’s financial support is sufficient over the upcoming years and that any conflict resolution results will be decided in a way that both further deters Putin.

The sovereign Russian funds that have been frozen in their jurisdictions since 2022 can now be taken into custody by the European Union and the UK. The most important thing is that they can seize the 185 billion euros ($214.8 billion) frozen at Euroclear, a Belgian clearing house, as well as the Russian government’s ($23.25 billion) frozen funds at Euroclear’s Luxembourg-based rival, Clearstream, which are thought to be worth around 20 billion euros ($23.25 billion).

Europe has been debating this possibility for months, and it is not at all unaware of it. An earlier $50 billion (43 billion euros) loan to Ukraine, which was secured over those assets, was already supported by Euroclear’s assets, which were used to fund it in January 2025.

Following a delay of a final decision at the previous council meeting on October 23 and the announcement to secure a new loan of up to 140 billion euros ($162.6bn) was anticipated, Europe was to proceed with the plan to secure the assets at the European Council meeting on December 18-19. The Belgian government has largely complied with its demands for indemnification while supporting Kremlin claims that such a move would be unheard of.

However, there is a lot of precedent. The United States seized German and Japanese government assets during the Second World War. Prior to Pearl Harbour’s attack, Japan’s assets were even frozen, the majority of which were later preserved under the San Francisco Peace Treaty of 1951.

The Kremlin’s threats to encircle Belgium in decades-long legal battles are also overblown. They rely on a bilateral investment treaty from the days of Soviet collapse that Putin and his supporters have unsuccessfully invoked to unfreeze their assets or challenge previous sanctions. Additionally, there are dozens of unresolved disputes involving Russia that are worth tens of billions of dollars in European courts, including the roughly 13 billion-euro ($15 billion) arbitration award won by Uniper against Gazprom for disruption of gas supplies in 2022. The largest and most significant case involving the expropriation of Yukos by the Kremlin continues to be the 2014 award to former Yukos shareholders. The Supreme Court of the Netherlands, which is now worth more than $65 billion, including interest, decided that the award was final and enforceable against Russian state assets around the world in October 2025. However, enforcement will still need to find trustworthy Russian assets that the courts will be willing to seize.

As it has done numerous times throughout Putin’s presidency, the Kremlin will undoubtedly engage in legal battles and litigation over these disputes. However, it will lose, and it will be responsible for the loss of its national interests. When crucial access to Western markets or assets was in question, Russia has repeatedly complied with bad decisions. The only conclusive evidence that Russia or the West has returned money owed as a result of litigation involving Russia’s war has been the settlements made by Russian state insurers NSK and Aeroflot over Putin’s 2022 sequestration of aircraft leased from Western businesses.

There is no justification for Europe’s current acting woes. Every month of inaction places a greater financial burden on Europe and makes it more likely that Washington will strike a deal that threatens European interests. How can Ukraine ensure continued funding and the ability to sustain its defense is now a crucial issue? Europe must act urgently before the Trump Administration attempts to negotiate a deal with Russia.

The 28-point “peace plan” developed by Kremlin insiders and approved by Trump’s special envoy and long-time associate Steve Witkoff last month includes slicing up these same frozen funds, requiring even more funding from Europe, as well as diverting frozen Russian assets from Ukraine’s reconstruction while placing an additional financial burden on Europe. If the Kremlin violates its obligations, as it did with the ceasefire agreements signed in 2014 and 2015 following its initial invasion of Ukraine, with such a deal, Europe would be left with an even bigger bill.

In the negotiations over the future of Ukraine, Europe has the power to use it to advance its political, economic, and military interests.

Isack Hadjar to replace Yuki Tsunoda at Red Bull for 2026 F1 season

The Formula One (F1) teams announced on Tuesday that Isack Hadjar will take Yuki Tsunoda’s place as Max Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate for the upcoming season, with Arvid Lindblad joining Liam Lawson at Racing Bulls.

Hadjar, a 21-year-old Frenchman, has made a big impression with his sister team Racing Bulls, including claiming third place at the Dutch Grand Prix at the end of August.

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Lindblad, who was born in Britain and has Swedish heritage through his mother, joins Lawson as the only rookie on the grid for 2026.

With Tsunoda’s departure, Formula One has lost its Japanese driver. Red Bull stated that he will continue playing for the team as a reserve.

Hadjar is the third Red Bull Racing driver to fill a position previously held by him.

In December, Lawson was chosen to take Sergio Perez’ place. Following the opening two Grand Prix of 2025, Tsunoda took the New Zealander’s place in March.

Verstappen will compete on Sunday at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix to defend his fifth successive World Drivers’ title.

The Red Bull Racing driver lineup for the 2026 Formula One season will be Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar.

Is war between Ethiopia & Eritrea inevitable?: Mehdi Hasan & Getachew Reda

Getachew Reda and Mehdi Hasan debate the conflict over their relationship and Tigray’s justice system.

The Tigray People’s Liberation Front and Ethiopia’s federal government engaged in a brutal civil war in 2022 under the Pretoria Agreement.

The desire for lasting peace and justice has vanished today. Many people are concerned about renewed hostilities as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government’s relations with the TPLF escalate.

And because of this, the countries are teetering on the brink of war and have deteriorated in relations with neighboring Eritrea, which was a country that supported the TPLF.

Getachew Reda served as Tigray’s interim president and its lead political figure during the civil war.

He joined his former adversary, Abiy, and claimed there was deep-seated corruption within the TPLF leadership after a public disagreement.

Ethiopia’s prime minister’s adviser Getachew Reda confronts Mehdi Hasan in a confrontation about his new alliance with Abiy, and he inquires whether Ethiopia and Eritrea are headed for war.

Athletic Bilbao vs Real Madrid La Liga preview – team news, start, lineups

Who: Real Madrid vs. Athletic Bilbao
What: Spain’s La Liga
Where: The San Mames Stadium, Bilbao, Spain
When: Wednesday at 7pm (18:00 GMT)
How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 15:00 GMT in advance of our live text commentary stream.

After a string of draws, Real Madrid are attempting to reclaim control of the La Liga title with a victory over Athletic Bilbao.

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At lowly Girona on Sunday, Madrid were forced to hold on for a third consecutive La Liga draw before coming back from a goal down.

With goals from Robert Navarro and Nico Williams, Athletic Bilbao, who are eighth in the division, have 20 points from their first 14 games, won 2-0 at Levante on Saturday.

Real Madrid manager Alonso is under increased pressure.

Real coach Xabi Alonso is under increased pressure because of recent rumors that his future may be uncertain in the Madrid dugout as a result of their draw with Girona.

After the game, Alonso told reporters, “We are up there, it’s all very even, it’s a long season and we have to continue.”

“I liked how the players responded. We had to work together, be self-critical enough, and be ready to win away from home, but it was not enough to turn things around.

Due to the club’s participation in the Spanish Super Cup in January, Madrid will travel to Bilbao on Wednesday for its fourth straight home game.

Alonso continued, “The table will be difficult-fought and there will be a lot of movement.”

In the summer, Xabi Alonso replaced Carlo Ancelotti.

We must alter this dynamic, it says.

Before Morocco international Azzedine Ounahi fired a stunning header home from just inside the area on Sunday, Madrid’s superstar striker Kylian Mbappe was forced to play a goal for handball moments before the infamous handball ruled out for the striker.

Before Los Blancos fought back, Real goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois saved a stunning save to divert Vladyslav Vanat’s cross goal.

Vinicius Jr was clumsily felled in the box by Hugo Rincon after being denied an offside goal.

Mbappe scored his 14th La Liga goal of the season by smashing the resultant penalty past Paulo Gazzaniga’s diving effort.

The league is still ongoing and will continue for a very long, Mbappe wrote on social media. “Absolutely not the result we wanted. We must alter this dynamic and demonstrate our collective strength.

TOPSHOT - Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe celebrates scoring the opening goal during the Spanish league football match between Girona FC and Real Madrid CF at Montilivi Stadium in Girona on November 30, 2025. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappe celebrates scoring the equalizer in Girona [Josep Lago/AFP]

With their victory over Levante, Bilbao’s morale rises.

After a number of depressing defeats in recent weeks, manager Ernesto Valverde acknowledged that Athletic’s victory over Levante gave his team much-needed moral support.

Following the game, Valverde stated, “This match was very important for us in many ways, both morale wise and most importantly, to gain our confidence after some less than positive results.”

However, Valverde cautioned against “taking each game as it comes and fight for the win” and stated that “we have a difficult and very exciting week ahead of us with tough opponents coming to San Mames.”

In response to transfer rumors, Williams says, “Club and City mean everything to me.”

After being once more linked with a move to Barcelona despite having his contract extension until 2035, the Athletic winger revealed his deep devotion to his boyhood club and Bilbao.

I’ve developed as a person and as a player because of Athletic and Bilbao, Nico Williams said.

“Representing this club and this city has taught me the value of family, humility, and hard work. As the motto states, “Athletic is unique in the world.”

He continued, “I have my family and loved ones with whom I make every decision here in Bilbao.” It’s a dream come true to compete in the Champions League alongside my brother.

VALENCIA, SPAIN - NOVEMBER 29: Jeremy Toljan of Levante UD competes for the ball with Nico Williams of Athletic Club during the LaLiga EA Sports match between Levante UD and Athletic Club at Ciutat de Valencia on November 29, 2025 in Valencia, Spain. (Photo by Mateo Villalba Sanchez/Getty Images)
Nico Williams, left, and Jeremy Toljan of Levante [Getty Images]

Head-to-head

Real Madrid won 124 of the 248 games that were played between the two clubs, Athletic Club won 79, and 45 of those games ended in draws.

Alex Berenguer and Gorka Guruzeta scored for Athletic in their most recent home game, 2-1, winning the previous meeting 2-1.

Since Los Blancos have typically been the dominant team in recent matches, Athletic won Athletic’s first La Liga game 1-0 over Real Madrid.

Bilbao Athletic team news

Oihan Sancet is still suspended, but midfielder Inigo Ruiz de Galarreta’s return from suspension will boost the team.

Inaki Williams is still a major doubt after missing Athletic’s last seven games with a groin issue, and Benat Prados, Unai Egiluz, Maroan Sannadi, and Robert Navarro have all been suspended with injuries.

Aymeric Laporte’s illness prevented him from playing for Levante, but he is expected to start against Madrid.

Starting XI, according to Athletic Bilbao

Gomez, Gomez, Gorosabel, Laporte, Vivian, Berchiche, Jauregizar, Berenguer, Sanchez, Nico Williams, Gorosabel,

Team news for Real Madrid

At the moment, Madrid’s injuries are centered on the defense.

Due to the recovery of his own muscular injury, centre-back Dean Huijsen is a significant doubt after missing his last two games due to a muscular issue, and he is also unlikely to play.

After having a knee problem removed, Dani Carvajal will be sidelined until 2026.

However, center-back Raul Asencio is expected to recover in time for the Bilbao game despite missing the game against Girona due to illness.

Real Madrid’s starting XI is anticipated

Bulgarian government pulls budget amid fierce protests

Bulgaria’s government has made it clear it will abandon a contentious budget proposal that sparked outcry across the country as it prepares to adopt the euro. This is the most recent wave of unrest to hit the nation.

The government’s information service reported on Tuesday that it had requested the 2026 budget be withdrawn from the public because it had hoped to see higher social security contributions and tax increases.

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Bulgaria has experienced seven snap elections and a number of short-lived governments since massive anti-corruption protests in 2020, which adds to years of political unrest. The nation is bitterly divided over its membership in the EU and its wider geopolitical relationship with Russia.

“Don’t let ourselves be taken advantage of.”

The most recent budget proposal, which was the first to be calculated in euros, was criticized by critics who claimed it would not only hurt the economy but also send more money to corrupt state institutions. According to Transparency International, Bulgaria is ranked as the most corrupt nation in the EU.

“We are here to protest our future,” the statement read. We want to live in a European nation, not one that is ruled by corruption and the mafia, Ventsislava Vasileva, a student who is 21 and attending the demonstration, told Agence France-Presse.

Following protests last week, the government initially promised to retract and revise the budget proposal, but it later backed away, causing yet another round of demonstrations on Monday night in major cities. According to organizers, 50 000 people participated in youth-led demonstrations in Sofia, the capital.

Demonstrators demanded that the government rewrite the draft budget or step down, using slogans like “we will not allow ourselves to be lied to, we will not allow ourselves to be robbed.” Generation Z is Coming, and Young Bulgaria Without the Mafia were on signposts in front of the parliament.

Despite being urged by organizers to maintain peaceful protests, violent verbal exchanges broke out between police and a small group of protesters. Police officers in riot gear pepper-spraying protesters, as well as officers who were surrounded by the main ruling parties’ offices, who were also hurling rocks and firecrackers at them.

Police reported that 10 people had been detained while several others had injuries.

A protester and Bulgarian police clash during a police protest on December 1 in Sofia [Nikolay Doychinov/AFP]

The abandoned budget’s supporters claimed that the planned increase in spending would have been offset by higher taxes on employees and businesses as well as a sharp rise in public debt. They claimed that this would have increased inflation without boosting public services’ effectiveness.

However, the government argued that the plan was necessary to meet the eurozone’s requirement for a budget deficit under 3% of GDP.

Around half of Bulgarians oppose the adoption of the euro, fearing that retailers will profit from the switch from the lev, the country’s national currency, to raise prices.

Israel’s genocide in Gaza has not stopped, despite the ceasefire: Analysts

A ceasefire on October 10, 2025, was supposed to put an end to Israel’s genocidal conflict in Gaza.

However, after two months, Israel has violated the ceasefire more than 500 times, killing at least 356 Palestinians and overthrowing Gaza’s total death toll.

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Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has made it clear that the conflict is still ongoing.

According to analysts, the war has continued despite the slowdown in Israel’s killing of Palestinians in Gaza, for all intents and purposes.

According to Muhammad Shehada, a visiting fellow with the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations, “genocide is not just mass killing.”

He claimed that the population’s ability to coexist as a group is also being ruined by the mass destruction of infrastructure, ethnic cleansing, and starvation.

Political spectacle and theater

According to analysts, the ceasefire gave the international community an excuse to stop focusing on Israel’s actions in Gaza rather than as a pardon for Palestinians.

The US-backed ceasefire agreement was intended to stop Israeli attacks on Gaza and prompt the start of aid deliveries to Palestinians who were besieged by the Gaza Strip, which had been declared a famine.

US President Donald Trump stated from Cairo, where a Gaza peace summit was taking place, that “we have finally found peace in the Middle East.”

Israel, however, kept attacking. More than 1,500 buildings were destroyed, and it has expanded further into Gaza, preventing residents from entering the aid they agreed to.

“It’s theater because everyone was upset about the genocide and wanted to stop rather than end it,” said one witness. And that is exactly what Shehada said.

Gaza has scurried in and out of media attention in the weeks since the ceasefire was established.

According to Lebanese Palestinian researcher and writer Elia Ayoub, “the main difference is, of course, the reduced media coverage, which was one of the intended purposes of the so-called ceasefire.”

“Israel is currently under much less pressure than it was up until October 10; there isn’t any hope of accountability.”

Israel’s genocide is still ongoing.

Amnesty International, which released a legal analysis of what it called the “ongoing genocide in the Occupied Gaza Strip,” took note of the Palestinians’ ongoing harm in Gaza last week.

“The world must not be deceived,” he said. Amnesty International secretary-general Agnes Callamard said that Israel’s genocide is still ongoing.

The analysis cites the number of Palestinians who have died as a result of the ceasefire, Israel’s restrictions on humanitarian and medical supplies, and how the Israeli blockade and siege of Gaza caused a famine and increased the risk of illnesses.

There is no evidence that Israel’s intentions have changed, according to Callamard, who said there is no indication that it is taking serious action to stop the deadly effects of its crimes.

Prior to the ceasefire, UNRWA’s head, UNRWA’s Philippe Lazzarini, reported on October 1 that 100 people per day were dying in Gaza, primarily from Israeli military operations or gunshots at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution points.

The foundations of Palestinian society in Gaza are still inruins, and even less people have died as a result of direct military operations since the ceasefire.

Defense analyst Hamze Attar claimed that the Israeli “yellow line of occupation” in the Gaza Strip is a continuation of the genocide and that the pace is different, the destruction of the homes is ongoing, and Palestinians are still killed, and the Israeli “yellow line of occupation” is still ongoing.

“The genocide involves preventing people from returning to their homes and creating a new reality in the Gaza Strip,” said one author.

Simply genocide

Hamas and other Palestinian organizations were required to release the prisoners held in Gaza, one of the main stipulations of the ceasefire. Ran Gvili, an Israeli policeman, and Sudthisak Rinthalak, a Thai national, have returned all living prisoners and all but two of the bodies of dead prisoners.

According to Israeli media, one of the bodies that are still unaccounted for may be returned in the near future. The most fervent supporters of Israel argued for months that the war would be ended by the captives’ return.

Hazem Qassem, a spokesman for Hamas, previously stated that the organization has made it “committed to fully complete the exchange process and its ongoing efforts to finalize it despite significant difficulties.”

In terms of Israel, it released the bodies of 345 Palestinian prisoners who had perished in its prisons and released 2, 000 of them. Many allegedly displayed signs of torture, mutilation, and execution. Israel hasn’t, however, reduced its grip on Gaza’s citizens.

No one bothers with details as soon as ceasefires come into effect, Shehada said, giving Israel the freedom to do whatever it wants.

Shehada claimed that Trump is more interested in the spectacle of peace than “the dynamics on the ground,” noting that Israel consistently violates the ceasefire, making it difficult for the mediators to keep up.

He claimed that the Palestinians’ ethnic cleansing in Gaza was still the end goal.

According to analysts, Israel has violated peace agreements in Gaza as well as in Lebanon and Syria. Analysts have repeatedly doubted Netanyahu’s claims that his goal is to annihilate and destroy Hamas.

According to Ayoub, “it confirms what we already knew: that the goal is not to end an armed group like Hamas but to ensure that life itself cannot be sustained in Gaza over the long term.”