Illustration by: The
Business Standard
Using frozen Russian assets to
rebuild Ukraine may seem like the ideal solution, but the answer is not that
simple, as it will undoubtedly diminish the trust and confidence of other world
governments in Western institutions.
With the advent of the Russia
- Ukraine war in February 2022, much of the West, particularly the United
States and the European Union, seized billions of dollars worth of Russian
assets. These assets ranged from individual bank accounts of Russian billionaires
to real estate and other financial investments.
In January 2024, Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told the BBC at the World Economic Forum held in
Switzerland that there is approximately $300 billion worth of frozen Russian
assets which can be used to rebuild Ukraine and ensure that Western taxpayers
are not the only ones paying for the defence of Ukraine. Talk of such actions
is not new, as Western leaders have suggested this move even in the early
months of the conflict.
It may seem like the ideal
solution to the war depending on your political views, however, it is not that
simple. To understand this, one must first ask why governments 'park' their
wealth in Western institutions like banks, government bonds, real estate, etc
in the first place.
Western financial institutions
are generally more stable compared to a developing economy. Often, these assets
are held in currencies denominated in USD- the world's reserve currency along
with the GBP and Euro. They are also more secure than a developing nation's
banks. This security ranges from physical safeguarding and low volatility to
even cybersecurity.
These financial institutions
offer investment opportunities in the form of corporate bonds, stocks and other
financial instruments, which have historically appreciated in value.
Governments keep their assets not just for these opportunities but also to diversify
their assets.
These institutions also have a
comparatively higher global presence compared to a developing economy's smaller
banks, making it more convenient for international transactions.
Finally, Western financial
institutions are subject to strict financial scrutiny and operate within a
robust legal framework which ensures they manage their funds with strict
compliance, which is not often the case in a developing jurisdiction's banks.
Each of these points has one
element in common - trust.
Western governments using the
frozen Russian assets will undoubtedly diminish the trust and confidence of
other world governments. They may reconsider investing/depositing significant
portions of their assets in Western banks due to the risk of asset seizures.
However, there are a few key factors to consider before drawing conclusions.
Firstly, in this conflict, Russia
has been the aggressor as they invaded the sovereign state of Ukraine in breach
of established International Law. Russia may argue against using their seized
assets on many grounds, particularly sovereign immunity.
Sovereign immunity is a legal
doctrine that presumes governments are not capable of committing legal wrongs
unlike individuals or private entities. However, this is the weakest argument
against using seized Russian funds for Ukraine, as the sovereign immunity
doctrine is based on the norms of International Law, which they are clearly in
breach of.
There is also a legal framework
issue as there must be existing laws that allow the use of seized Russian
assets. For example, during the Gulf War, Iraqi assets seized by the coalition
forces were used to compensate Kuwaiti victims of the war. This was because as
per US laws, this action was legal. However, the EU lacks such laws and may
take a long time to pass them.
It has become an open secret now
that Western governments have turned a blind eye to the law firms that
facilitated the transfer of Russian Oligarch funds into their jurisdiction. For
context, London is touted as the money laundering hub or capital of Europe by
many leading academics of Financial Crime. It is often argued that if this
transfer of wealth was done by the books legally, it would have never been this
easy.
The West often boasts about its
strong 'rule of law' but why couldn't it prevent the billions of dollars of
laundered Russian funds in the past few decades? These funds should not have
entered their jurisdiction in the first place and should have been seized long
ago.
Most importantly, using the
seized Russian assets may raise fear among other governments, such as the Gulf
States, China or Latin America, and they may withdraw their invested funds from
Western markets. This is particularly concerning if one considers for example,
that China alone has invested around $8 billion into US treasury bonds. This
may collectively destabilise the US Dollar - the world's reserve
currency.
Calls to stop the usage of the
frozen assets may come from inside the house itself - the private mega
corporations themselves. Investment companies such as Blackrock have their own
plan to rebuild Ukraine worth $400 Billion in loans, banking giant JP Morgan
has already allocated $1 billion this year to about 25-30 projects for
Ukraine's reconstruction.
The bigger stakeholders may be
the Western Defense industry. They hold vast lobbying power within their
governments and can leverage that to keep the war dragging on as it profits
them generously. Of the $61 billion aid package approved by the US Congress,
around $48 Billion will go straight to the pockets of US defence and aerospace
arms manufacturers. The details of other EU defence manufacturers getting
orders are not yet disclosed.
One aspect that cannot be ignored
is that Russia has already forced the sale of Western businesses such as
Starbucks and McDonalds to domestic entities, thereby ending Western business
operations in their jurisdictions. So, in terms of seizure and utilisation of
hostile nation assets, has Russia not fired the first economic shot?
Unfortunately, there is no
straight answer to this complex dilemma. However, if the Western governments
can unite and set their differences aside, the possibility of using frozen
Russian assets to rebuild Ukraine and even possibly fund the Ukrainian defence
forces may not be impossible.
Furthermore, utilising the frozen
Russian assets against them sends a strong message to other authoritarian
regimes globally about the economic repercussions of attacking other sovereign
states. A strong economy funds a nation's armed forces, without which, invasion
of sovereign states is not feasible.
Illustration by: The
Business Standard
Written by
Shafqat Aziz
Barrister (of Lincoln’s Inn)
LLM Corporate Law, NTU
PGDL, UWE Bristol
LLB, BPP University
Accredited Civil-Commercial Mediator (ADR-ODR International)
First published by The
Business Standard: Will
the West use frozen Russian assets against Russia?

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