EU leaders Thursday tasked the European Commission to move ahead with options for funding Ukraine for two more years, leaving the door open for a mammoth loan using frozen Russian assets, diplomats told AFP.
In broadly worded conclusions adopted after marathon talks in Brussels, EU leaders stopped short of greenlighting plans for the 140-billion-euro ($162-billion) "reparations loan" -- pushing that crunch decision to December.
But several diplomats told AFP the text was a step towards a potential agreement -- though it had to be watered down in the face of strong objections from Belgium, where the bulk of the Russian central bank funds are held.
European Council President Antonio Costa said the bloc had "delivered an important message".
"The EU is committed to addressing Ukraine's pre

Omak Okanogan County Chronicle

CNN
Raw Story
The Daily Beast
The Fashion Spot
NBC10 Philadelphia Entertainment
Martinsburg Journal