European leaders gathered in The Hague, Netherlands, on Dec. 16 to launch an International Claims Commission designed to compensate Ukraine for the damage and alleged war crimes perpetrated in the country by Russia.
Scores of senior figures from across the continent descended on the International City of Peace and Justice to formally approve plans to create the compensation body. They included Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Dutch Acting Prime Minister Dick Schoof, and European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas.
It is Europe’s longest-standing intergovernmental organization and comprises 46 member states, 19 more than the EU.
“The goal is to have validated claims that will ultimately be paid by Russia. It will really have to be paid by Russia, this commission offers no guarantee for the damages,” Dutch Foreign Minister David van Weel said, though details of how any damages awarded by the commission would be paid are yet to be thrashed out.
Early discussions have mooted using assets belonging to Moscow, which the EU has frozen, to fund potential payments with supplementary funds to be provided by member contributions.
“It’s not enough to force Russia into a deal. It’s not enough to make it stop killing. We must make Russia accept that there are rules in the world.”
“We expect that every mechanism for compensation from the Register of Damage and Claims Commission to the actual payments will start working and receive strong and sufficient international support, so that people can truly feel that any kind of damage caused by the war can be compensated.”
He added that the war and Moscow’s culpability for starting it must serve as a “clear example,” so others will not “choose aggression.”
“Today in The Hague, we take a major step toward accountability by establishing a commission to address claims for Russian war damages.”
Kallas added that the EU will support the commission’s work, including with an initial contribution of 1 million euros ($1.8 million).
Plans to compensate victims of war crimes could, however, founder if the total amnesty proposed in U.S. President Donald Trump’s original 28-point peace plan were to be brought in.
However, that figure does not include damage caused this year, which saw an escalation in Russian drone and missile strikes on utilities, transport, and civilian infrastructure.
Russia has not yet made any public comments on the commission’s launch.







