Biden, Macron reach agreement on using Russian assets for Ukraine

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France's President Emmanuel Macron (L) and US President Joe Biden (C) leave after a joint statement at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, 8 June 2024. [EPA-EFE/ANDRE PAIN]

US President Joe Biden said on Sunday (9 June) he had reached an agreement with French President Emmanuel Macron on the use of profits from frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine.

Asked if the two men had discussed the issue and whether they had come up with an agreement, Biden replied “Yes and yes.”

The Group of Seven nations (G7) and the European Union are considering how to use profits generated by Russian assets immobilized in the West to provide Ukraine with a large up-front loan now and secure Kyiv’s financing for 2025.

Around €260 billion of Russian central bank funds are frozen worldwide, most of it in the EU. The funds generate €2.5 billion to €3.5 billion a year in profit, which the EU says is not contractually owed to Russia and therefore represents a windfall.

The idea, championed by the US, is to use this profit as a steady revenue stream to service a large loan of $50 billion that could be raised on the market. Russia says any diversion of the profits from its frozen funds would amount to theft.

Tapping profits from Russian assets has drawn concerns from some countries, but a US Treasury official said on Tuesday that the United States and its G7 partners were making progress.

Biden visits cemetery that Trump skipped

Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, stopped at an American cemetery in France on Sunday that former president Donald Trump declined to visit in 2018, drawing widespread criticism at the time.

As they conclude their trip to France, the Bidens visited Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in Belleau, about 85 kilometers east of Paris, to pay respects to US soldiers and marines killed during World War One.

“The idea that we’re able to avoid being engaged in major battles in Europe is just not realistic,” Biden told reporters. “That is why it’s so important, the alliances that we have.”

Biden, a Democrat, is running against Trump, a Republican, for reelection in November.

Trump’s White House said in 2018 that the then-president, who was also on a trip to France, could not visit the cemetery because of bad weather. His chief of staff at the time, John Kelly, a retired general, attended instead, in light rain.

Without mentioning Trump by name, Biden said he would not have come to Normandy without also visiting Aisne-Marne.

“America showed up. America showed up to stop the Germans, America showed up to make sure that they did not prevail, and America shows up when we’re needed,” Biden said.

Biden is finishing a five-day trip that included a commemoration of the 80th anniversary of D-Day with World War Two veterans in Normandy and a state visit in Paris.

He has made subtle references to Trump without naming him throughout the trip, including in a speech at the Normandy coast site where US Army Rangers scaled a 100-foot (30.5-meter) cliff during the D-Day landings.

Biden asks Americans to recommit to democracy in Normandy cliff speech

Atop the cliff that US Army Rangers scaled 80 years ago on D-Day, President Joe Biden on Friday (7 June) compared the threats posed by Nazi Germany to those facing the world today by dictators and authoritarianism, and urged Americans to resist isolationism.

Biden has pushed to uphold strong US alliances while Trump has been critical of NATO and threatened not to defend its members if they don’t pay more for their defence.

(Edited by Georgi Gotev)

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