UKâs £2.26bn loan for Ukraine âcan help turn the tables on Putinâs war machineâ


The money is the UKâs contribution to a 50 billion dollar (£38.39 billion) loan package agreed by the G7 group of nations financed through the interest on sanctioned Russian sovereign assets.
The money could be used to fund air defence, artillery or other military equipment and comes on top of the UKâs existing £3 billion-a-year support for Ukraine.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said: âOur support for Ukraine and her men and women in their fight for freedom from Putinâs aggression is unwavering and will remain so for as long as it takes.
âThis new money is in Britainâs national interest because the front line of our defence â the defence of our democracy and shared values â is in the Ukrainian trenches. A safe and secure Ukraine is a safe and secure United Kingdom.â
The G7 â the UK, US, Canada, Japan, France, Germany and Italy, along with the EU â agreed in June to the loan, using the interest from Russian state funds frozen as a result of sanctions.

In the immediate aftermath of Mr Putinâs invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russian central bank assets held overseas were frozen by the allies and the G7 agreed to use the interest on more than £200 billion of immobilised funds to support Kyivâs resistance.
The UK Government will introduce new laws within weeks to enable the transfer of the new funds to Ukraine as quickly as possible.
Defence Secretary John Healey said: âBy using the money generated from these sanctioned Russian assets, we can help turn the tables on Putinâs war machine.

âThis urgent funding will directly support Ukraineâs defence using the proceeds from assets that had helped fuel Putinâs aggression.
âThe UK is stepping up our support to Ukraine, speeding up supplies of vital equipment and boosting our defence industries. We will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.â