Swedish Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard criticized the EU for paying Russia more in gas and oil than it provides in aid to Ukraine, calling the situation "completely disgraceful."The EU is considering a support package that would borrow €140 billion using frozen Russian state assets as collateral, but Belgium has legal concerns over confiscating these assets and is exploring alternatives such as Norway's sovereign wealth fund.Meanwhile, a US peace plan proposing to invest frozen Russian assets under US control has complicated the EU's reparations loan proposal, raising concerns about undermining the EU's leverage over Moscow.