Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you’re signed up. The EU has been tightening the economic screws on Moscow through a series of sanctions packages since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. But as our team reported overnight, the bloc’s 19th sanctions bundle has hit a snag. Demands by Austria that the EU unfreeze assets linked to Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska to compensate one of its banks left the country isolated at a meeting of EU ambassadors yesterday, with no agreement reached. Some background: the EU sanctioned Deripaska in 2022, shortly after Russia’s invasion, freezing his shares in a construction firm now at the center of the complex financial proposal under consideration to compensate Raiffeisen bank. But many member states fear the move could create a precedent for other sanctioned individuals and entities. Austria’s concerns illustrate the challenge faced by the EU – how to square the specific demands and vulnerabilities of individual countries with the need to act for the greater good. In an interview with Bloomberg TV today, EU sanctions envoy David O’Sullivan played down the latest sticking-point, pointing out that Austria isn’t the only problem. Slovakia has also raised issues with the package. David O’Sullivan. Photographer: Mark Wilson/Getty Images This is “the normal cut and thrust of European negotiations when you require unanimous agreement,” O’Sullivan said, predicting that the package will be passed within the next week to 10 days. That’s just in time for the Oct. 23-24 summit in Brussels. O’Sullivan said that sanctions have “proven successful” in hitting the Russian economy but cautioned that the measures “are not going to stop a war, when you have a dictator such as Mr. Putin.” Meanwhile, ambassadors were also briefed Wednesday on discussions around the terms of the EU-US trade deal amid fresh demands from Washington. “We would like to think that a deal is a deal and you don’t reopen it. But we also know that Mr. Trump is a disrupter, someone who likes to be unpredictable,” said O’Sullivan who served as the EU ambassador in Washington during the first Trump administration. “If it is disrupted by the US, then obviously it may be difficult to see it finally approved,” he added, noting that the European Parliament still has to agree to the deal. |