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G7 leaders met in Italy Thursday as they work to reach an agreement on a plan to use frozen Russian funds to support Ukraine. Photo by Donato Fasano/EPA-EFE

G7 leaders met in Italy Thursday as they work to reach an agreement on a plan to use frozen Russian funds to support Ukraine. Photo by Donato Fasano/EPA-EFE

June 13 (UPI) — Global leaders attending a Group of Seven summit getting underway Thursday in Italy are set to try to iron out a plan to use the assets of Russia frozen in Western banks and financial institutions to provide Ukraine with as much as $50 billion a year.

Getting an agreement is U.S. President Joe Biden‘s priority at the three-day gathering in the port city of Bari as a way of replacing taxpayer funding for the defense of an increasingly embattled Ukraine with profits raised from Russian foreign-currency deposits, equities and sovereign bond holdings, according to ABC News.

G7 countries — Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Italy and Canada along with the United States — are not yet all on the same on the same page but are scheduled to negotiate on the details in a special two-hour session set aside for Thursday afternoon, with the aim of announcing an agreement in their end-of-summit communique.

The U.S. proposal is for a loan secured with interest earned on the $325 billion in Russian assets frozen by G7 nations and the European Union following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022.

The plan provides a way around international law which prohibits governments from confiscating the assets and sending them to Ukraine, relieves pressure on the coffers of Western donors and acts as a deterrent to other would-be aggressors.

However, concerns remain around possible knock-on ramifications on the risk premium countries like China, India and Saudi Arabia may demand on their assets as well as reciprocal action by Moscow against Western-controlled assets in Russia that could wipe any financial benefits of the plan.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky who is in Bari for a series of bilateral meetings, including with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the heads of the European Council and IMF, welcomed the focus on the funding plan as well as Ukraine’s “defense and economic resilience.”

“For us, the main issues are developing our fighter jet coalition, expediting pilot training, and accelerating aircraft delivery. Development of the Ukrainian air defense system based on the most powerful Western systems, as well as an increase in long-range capability,” he wrote on X.

“Approval of the format for using Russian assets to benefit Ukraine, particularly in the development of our defense industry, and joint weapon production.”

He said two final bilateral security agreements would be signed with President Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida following on from Declaration of Support for Ukraine announced by G7 chair Japan at the NATO Summit in Vilnius in July.

“The entire Ukrainian people, including our warriors, see that the G7 will always support Ukraine. I am grateful to our partners for their belief in us and our victory,” said Zelensky.

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