Late on Thursday night, EU leaders finally admitted the plan would not work.
They had spent months exploring an unprecedented way to finance Ukraine’s war effort.
The proposal aimed to turn frozen Russian central bank assets into a zero-interest reparations loan.
Supporters saw moral clarity and political symbolism in the idea.
Opponents saw legal uncertainty, financial exposure, and unpredictable consequences.
As discussions reached their final stage, hesitation replaced ambition.
Leaders balked at crossing legal and financial boundaries without precedent.
Instead of risking unknown fallout, they chose a familiar and safer solution.
The EU will now raise €90 billion through joint borrowing on markets.
The €210 billion in immobilised Russian assets will remain untouched.
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever emerged as the most determined opponent.
He warned that using Russian assets would expose Europe to serious financial risk.
He argued governments prefer certainty when consequences could spiral uncontrollably.
In the end, his caution resonated with many reluctant capitals.
The decision leaves Ukraine without the funding structure the Commission promised.
Advocates once praised the loan as ingenious and historic.
Critics dismissed it as reckless and legally fragile.
By Thursday night, caution decisively won.
How Momentum Built, Then Began to Fracture
The idea surfaced publicly on 10 September in Strasbourg.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen introduced it during her State of the EU speech.
She suggested using profits from frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine.
Details remained vague, but the political message sounded clear.
Russia started the war and should bear its financial cost.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz soon pushed the proposal further.
He endorsed it in a Financial Times opinion piece.
He framed approval as both achievable and necessary.
Many diplomats felt blindsided by his confidence.
Some accused Germany of setting the agenda alone.
The Commission later circulated a short document outlining the concept.
Belgium reacted immediately and forcefully.
The country holds roughly €185 billion of frozen Russian assets through Euroclear.
Officials felt excluded from early discussions despite carrying the largest exposure.
De Wever publicly warned against spending Europe’s strongest leverage over Moscow.
He argued that using the assets destroyed future bargaining power.
He demanded airtight legal certainty and full risk sharing.
An October summit ended without agreement.
Leaders asked the Commission to explore multiple funding options instead.
Von der Leyen still described the reparations loan as the preferred path.
Several Nordic leaders publicly rejected joint debt alternatives.
The political divide widened rather than narrowed.
Why the Proposal Finally Collapsed
In November, von der Leyen presented three options to EU leaders.
The list included voluntary contributions, joint debt, and the reparations loan.
She admitted that every option carried heavy consequences.
Her letter attempted to address Belgium’s concerns directly.
It promised strong guarantees and broad international participation.
It also warned of reputational and financial risks to the eurozone.
External events briefly revived the plan’s appeal.
US and Russian officials circulated a controversial peace framework.
That document suggested exploiting frozen assets for shared commercial benefit.
European leaders rejected the idea outright.
They insisted Europe must control decisions under its jurisdiction.
Momentum faded again when De Wever sent a sharply critical letter.
He described the proposal as fundamentally flawed and dangerous.
He warned it could undermine future peace negotiations.
In December, the Commission released detailed legal texts.
The European Central Bank refused to provide a liquidity backstop.
Euroclear then criticised the proposal publicly.
It described the plan as fragile, experimental, and risky for investors.
Several eastern and northern states defended the loan.
They argued it respected Ukraine’s right to compensation.
Senior Commission officials echoed that argument repeatedly.
Opposition widened when Italy, Bulgaria, and Malta raised objections.
They called for safer and more predictable financing methods.
At the 18 December summit, leaders sought a final compromise.
They discussed unlimited guarantees and full reimbursement commitments.
That language alarmed exhausted negotiators.
Leaders suddenly faced the prospect of bailing out Belgian banks.
They shelved the reparations loan and chose joint debt instead.
De Wever said he expected the outcome.
He argued no financial plan comes without real costs.
He concluded that free money simply does not exist.
