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UK set to enter talks to join the European Union’s $105.9 billion Ukraine loan

By Thomson Reuters May 3, 2026 | 4:31 PM

By Muvija M

LONDON, May 3 (Reuters) – Britain is set to enter talks to join the European Union’s 78 billion pound loan ($106 billion) to Ukraine, the government said on Sunday, in ​a further sign of deepening European defence ties under rising ‌U.S. pressure.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected on Monday to tell a summit in Armenia’s capital Yerevan of the European Political Community – a discussion forum set up after Russia’s invasion in 2022 – that Britain wants to work with the EU ‌to ​support Ukraine in getting vital military equipment, his ⁠office said.

The loan, approved by ⁠the EU last month, is set to cover two-thirds of Ukraine’s needs for the next two years, with the bulk of that amount earmarked for military spending as Kyiv defends itself against ​Russia’s four-year war.

The extra funding could also unlock opportunities for British businesses to meet Ukraine’s urgent needs, particularly in the defence sector, the ⁠government said in a statement.

FURTHER SANCTIONS ON ⁠RUSSIAN COMPANIES

Britain, which has imposed wide-ranging sanctions on ​Russia since the war began in 2022, will also announce another tranche ​of “stinging sanctions” on Russian companies this week to disrupt military supply ‌chains, it said.

Starmer’s visit, the first by a British leader to Armenia since former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1990, comes as the Trump administration pushes Europe to take more responsibility for the continent’s ⁠defence.

European countries, including Germany, France and Britain, have recently come under further pressure from Washington after refusing to join the U.S. and Israel’s war ⁠on Iran.

“When the ‌UK and the European Union work together, we ⁠all reap the benefits — and in these volatile times ​we ‌need to go further and faster on defence ​to keep ⁠people safe,” Starmer said in the statement.

He has previously called for stronger defence integration within the continent to cut NATO’s over-reliance on the U.S., hinting at further alignment with the EU’s single market and deeper economic integration, six years after Brexit.

($1 = 0.7368 pounds)

(Reporting by Muvija M; Editing ​by David Holmes)