Russian officials have warned of tit-for-tat actions as a response to transferring frozen assets to the Kiev regime, which may cost the West some $288 billion, according to Sputnik's calculations.
In the light of recent developments in the US Senate, the issue has taken a new, dramatic turn. On Wednesday, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was looking at a new draft bill, aimed at transferring Russian frozen assets over to Ukraine, Politico reported, citing two anonymous sources.
This unprecedented move would entail major consequences, as Russian officials have vowed to take similar retaliatory steps.
Sputnik has made calculations based on Russia's national statistics and the open data presented by the Financial Times. Per the estimates (see the graph below), Russia is currently holding some $288 billion worth of foreign assets, a billion more than that threatened to be seized by the West.
Moscow has maintained that such an attempt goes in violation of the international law. The Russian Foreign Ministry has dismissed the freezing of Russian assets as theft.
"Those who are trying to initiate this, and those who will implement it, must understand that Russia will never leave those who did this alone. And it will constantly exercise its right to a legal battle, internationally, nationally or otherwise. And this, of course, will have — both Europeans and Americans understand this very well — it will have legal consequences for those who initiated and implemented it," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov cautioned commenting on the issue.
Last year, Russian President Vladimir Putin dubbed the West’s asset seizure as “unseemly business,” and stressed that “stealing other people’s assets has never brought anyone good”.
The numbers support the fact that this not worth the gamble. However, if the West follows through with this ploy, grave global repercussions and serious distrust in the West's financial system would be far costlier.