At G7, Biden to push $50B loan to Ukraine using frozen Russian assets

The summit starts Thursday in Italy.

The U.S. argues this is a solution to relieve Ukraine’s desperate battlefield situation using Russian funds instead of taxpayer dollars. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky will attend the summit to personally drive home the urgency.

Biden is also expected to meet with Zelensky this week -- their second meeting in a week after their sit down in Paris.

Yet, the seven member countries have not reached a consensus. They will be negotiating the details during the summit, aiming to announce the agreement in the G7 communique at the end of the summit this week, the source added.

This plan to finance Ukraine would send a powerful message to Russia’s Vladimir Putin that he will not outlast the U.S. and its allies’ support for Ukraine, regardless of how elections in their countries unfold, according to the source.

But the G7 nations have to hammer out tricky details, including how disbursement would work and what the repayment assurances would be, the source said. European countries also have differing views on utilizing these profits, with some preferring direct spending on weapons. There are also complicated legal issues and concerns about who would back the loan.

Israel/Hamas war

China

The fear is that a flood of heavily subsidized products from China -- including steel, machinery, solar products, electric vehicles, and batters -- would decimate those industries in the U.S. and other countries. Last month, President Biden significantly increased tariffs on Chinese imports in strategic sectors, while leaving in place tariffs on more than $300 billion worth of Chinese goods that Trump had imposed.

Pope Francis, AI