Fraught EU summit backs Ukraine but divisions are clear
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50% Medium Right
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-68% Negative
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Contributing sentiments towards policy:
57% : After 17 hours of at times heated debate, EU leaders agreed in the early hours of Friday morning to jointly raise €90bn (£79bn; $105bn) in zero-interest loans to keep Ukraine financially afloat for the next two years.56% : Brussels said on Friday it was considering using the frozen Russian assets eventually, to repay the EU loan to Ukraine.
52% : But that would be something to be worked out in the future - if a peace deal is signed.For now, on top of the new EU loan, it's estimated Ukraine will need another €45bn euros to cover all its costs for 2026/2027.Brussels hopes non-EU allies of Ukraine like the UK, Japan and Canada might pick up some of that tab.
48% : He was talking about Europe.The new EU joint-loan plan for Ukraine replaces a much-debated EU proposal to raise the €90bn using frozen Russian state assets held in the bloc (€210bn euros' worth in total), mostly in Belgium.
47% : But in a blow to Brussels' desire to demonstrate decisive European unity over Ukraine to EU sceptics in Washington and Moscow, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic only agreed to support the plan - it required unanimity to be passed - if they were exempt from it individually.
41% : If Kyiv were to lose to Moscow on the battlefield because it was cash or weapons-strapped, they believe that would embolden Russia and would be a disaster for European security and stability more broadly.Arriving at the start of Thursday's fraught summit, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said EU leaders had a clear decision to make: pay money today, he said, or pay in blood tomorrow.
37% : Without the cash, Volodymyr Zelensky told EU leaders he wouldn't have enough money to pay Ukrainian soldiers or buy the weapons he needed to counter Russian aggression.The now agreed EU loan will be guaranteed by the bloc's common budget.
37% : But a number of EU countries feared legal retribution by Russia.
36% : This brings them into direct confrontation with EU countries geographically nearer to Russia such as Poland and the Baltic States.
*Our bias meter rating uses data science including sentiment analysis, machine learning and our proprietary algorithm for determining biases in news articles. Bias scores are on a scale of -100% to 100% with higher negative scores being more liberal and higher positive scores being more conservative, and 0% being neutral. The rating is an independent analysis and is not affiliated nor sponsored by the news source or any other organization.
BBC