Russia Frozen Assets Now Fund Ukraine's Defense - $246B Weapon
Автор: Sophia Grant Reports
Загружено: 2026-02-07
Просмотров: 1812
Описание:
Russia's frozen billions now fund Ukraine's defense—and Putin can't stop it. This investigation reveals how $50 billion in G7 loans force Russia to pay for its opponent's military operations, how Russia's strategic gold reserves are being depleted at record rates, and why China-Russia trade declined for the first time in five years. Every fact verified from official government sources.
🌍 IN THIS VIDEO:
$50B G7 ERA loans making Russia fund Ukraine's defense
€210B ($246B) Russian assets frozen indefinitely in EU
Ukraine's borrowing costs cut in half by ERA mechanism
Russia sells 57% of National Wealth Fund gold reserves
NWF liquid assets collapse from $113.5B to $51.6B
China-Russia trade falls 6.9% to $228B in 2025
Chinese vehicle exports to Russia plunge 46%
10.6 million Ukrainians displaced by war
EU approves €90B interest-free loan for 2026-2027
The Group of Seven nations executed one of history's most sophisticated financial operations: $50 billion in loans to Ukraine repaid by profits from Russia's own frozen assets. The US Treasury transferred $20 billion in December 2024. The EU contributed €18.1 billion in January 2025. These funds flow to Ukraine while Russia's frozen €210 billion in European banks generates the proceeds for repayment.
This analysis uses only verified data from official sources: US Department of Treasury, European Commission, G7 joint statements, Ukraine Ministry of Finance, UNHCR, China General Administration of Customs, Russia Ministry of Finance, and major international news agencies. No speculation. No predictions. Only confirmed facts.
Russia's Central Bank began selling physical gold from reserves in November 2025 for the first time. The National Wealth Fund has sold 232.6 tonnes of gold since the invasion began—a 57% decline from 405.7 tonnes to 173.1 tonnes. Total liquid assets in the fund crashed from $113.5 billion to $51.6 billion.
China-Russia trade posted its first decline in five years. Bilateral trade fell 6.9% from $244.8 billion in 2024 to $228.1 billion in 2025. Chinese vehicle exports to Russia dropped 46%. The explosive growth phase appears over.
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