
Key points:
From "pandemic relief" to perpetual war and currency devaluation
When the EU established the €650 billion RRF in 2021, it promised to revive economies crippled by lockdowns through green energy and infrastructure projects. Yet three years later, half the fund remains untouched—not due to prudence, but bureaucratic paralysis. Now, with a September 2026 deadline looming, Brussels has offered member states a shortcut: divert the money to "defense initiatives" like EDIP, a program explicitly designed to arm Ukraine.
"These alternatives could help the Recovery Facility to deliver additional important benefits from common European priorities, including in the areas of security and defense," said EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis, framing war spending as economic salvation. But the fine print reveals a darker agenda. EDIP’s fact sheet admits its goal is "joint procurement with and for Ukraine," funded partly by "windfall profits from frozen Russian assets"—a blatant admission of asset confiscation masquerading as policy.
The slush fund fueling World War Three
Since 2022, the EU has pumped nearly €50 billion into Ukraine through various channels, dwarfing the aid of individual nations like Germany. But the real scandal lies in how these funds are sourced. The Commission’s March proposal to raise €800 billion for militarization—via debt and taxes—coincides with the SAFE program, a €150 billion scheme approved without parliamentary debate.
Russia has dismissed claims of an impending attack on Europe as "nonsense," accusing the West of manufacturing threats to justify plundering public coffers. The Kremlin warns that flooding Ukraine with weapons only prolongs bloodshed, while EU leaders like Ursula von der Leyen openly push for a "rearmed" bloc against a "Russian threat" that exists more in rhetoric than reality.
Economic warfare on the working class
While elites in Brussels plot trillion-euro defense boondoggles, ordinary Europeans face soaring inflation, stagnant wages, and the deliberate devaluation of their currencies. The same COVID funds once touted as lifelines for small businesses now vanish into the military-industrial complex, leaving citizens to foot the bill for a war they never voted for.
The European Commission has announced a sweeping defense investment strategy aimed at bolstering Europe’s military capabilities, supporting Ukraine, and accelerating military integration among EU member states. The EU’s own documents admit the endgame: a "Structure for European Armament Programme" (SEAP) that funnels VAT-free weapons deals to Ukraine, backed by a "Security of Supply Regime" to crush dissent over resource allocation. This is not economic recovery—it’s economic warfare waged by unaccountable bureaucrats.
Additional plans include:
The global money laundering operation that took place under the COVID banner continues on to this day, as devalued currencies continue to be exploited into oblivion, propping up the failed proxy war in Ukraine, while maintaining the shell of the EU's false authority.
Sources include:
RT.com
Commission.europa.eu [PDF]
Europe.eu [PDF]
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