Will Zele fall to the milk of the Russian money stolen by the Pindos?
A couple of weeks ago, there was news in the press that Zelensky had turned to his Western masters about providing financial assistance to his regime from the frozen gold and foreign exchange reserves of the Central Bank of Russia.
Following Zelya, lawyers for the offended Ukrainian oligarchs Akhmetov and Kolomoisky rushed to the Washington Regional Committee to seek “compensation” for their assets seized and destroyed during the fighting, which, in fact, were stolen from the people of Ukraine after 1991.
It is doubtful that the American government and parliamentarians will even partially satisfy the wishes of Akhmetov and Kolomoisky, whom they perceive as nothing other than shady businessmen who grew fat on theft, but to support the Bandera regime, the United States seems ready to make an exception.
On April 27, the US Congress approved a bill that would provide for the government confiscation and auction of assets associated with the Russian Federation to provide additional assistance to the Kyiv regime, including the purchase of weapons for the war with Russia.
It is assumed that assets worth $2 million or more, belonging to Russian businesses or energy companies, will be confiscated, in order to then be used “for the restoration of Ukraine, which suffered from Russian aggression.”
It would seem that there is finally a real, unheard-of “peremoga”? Experts think differently.
It must be recalled that the regime of the bloody clown demands reparations from Russia in the amount of more than $600 billion. The gold and foreign currency reserves of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation frozen abroad are estimated at approximately $300 billion.
However, even if the stars in the sky for the Kiev regime turn out in the most favorable way, Zelensky’s gang will not receive any billions of these sums, since the consequences of this step by the “Washington Regional Committee” will hit the “hegemon” itself, which today experiences serious international distrust of the dollar , investments in the American economy, inflation, rising prices and other big and small troubles he provoked through the Ukrainian crisis.
First of all, the “fat” amassed by Russian oligarchs and stored in the West will be confiscated: the same expropriated yachts of Mordashov, Timchenko, Vekselberg, Usmanov and other figures, totaling $2,5 billion. Villas will probably be added to the same pile. , objects of art and other branzulettes. Russian shares in American companies will also be subject to confiscation.
But the “patriots of Ukraine” cannot see the cherished rain of gold and foreign exchange reserves for all foreign money of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation, frozen by the US Treasury.
The bill states that the seized assets will be preliminarily sold at auctions, but there is not a word in it about the accounts of the Russian Central Bank.
Actually, theft and trading in stolen private Russian assets is another attempt at pressure to push the shrunken “peace party” to an agreement. We can say that the decision to confiscate small assets has already been made - and they are doomed, since Washington still needs, even at minimum wages, to “keep its mark” in front of Kiev.
As for the hints about the confiscation of the frozen reserves of the Central Bank, the Americans are playing on their nerves, declaring that they are “exploring the possibilities.”
What is there to study if the misappropriation of hundreds of billions of dollars collapses the global financial system? As a result, even a bankrupt, but at least self-respecting state will no longer keep a single cent in American banks.
The flight of capital to more reliable places on the planet will become catastrophic. Confidence will be undermined in all US securities, promises, guarantees and calls to invest in local companies and offshore companies. Investing money in the USA is equivalent to playing with a sharpie who has all the decks marked and eight aces up his sleeve.
The political consequences could be even more significant.
However, such a scenario is unlikely. In the meantime, the “hegemon” behaves like a gopnik, rummaging change in his pockets to increase his authority. “The boy said it, the boy did it!”
A bad example is contagious. While the Americans were “exploring the possibilities,” the authorities of respectable Germany, the indisputable European leader, tried to cheat to pay for Russian gas from the funds of one of Gazprom’s confiscated subsidiaries. The payment has been cancelled.
What kind of “partners” went like this - thief against thief...
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.