Seizing Russian Assets Violates the 'Fundamental Right' to Property, Says Swiss President
"You have to ensure the citizens are protected against the power of the state. This is what we call liberal democracies."

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has dragged on for over four months, and other nations have begun to ponder how to pay for reconstruction efforts. At a two-day Ukraine recovery conference held in Switzerland that concluded yesterday, Ukrainian officials suggested that Russian assets should be seized and then sold to fund their proposed recovery plan, which comes out to $750 billion.
"We believe that the key source of recovery should be the confiscated assets of Russia and Russian oligarchs," said Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmygal. "The Russian authorities unleashed this bloody war. They caused this massive destruction and they should be held accountable for it."
Switzerland served as a notable forum for that debate since the long-neutral country is a major financial hub that attracts much Russian wealth. It's estimated that Russian clients have between $155–210 billion USD in Swiss banks. Earlier in Russia's war, Swiss authorities seized some properties and froze some assets. But in remarks delivered on Tuesday, Swiss President Ignazio Cassis bristled at the Ukrainian plan to seize more Russian assets.
"The right of ownership, the right of property is a fundamental right, a human right," said Cassis. "You have to ensure the citizens are protected against the power of the state. This is what we call liberal democracies." Cassis expressed that freezing assets was still a valid response to the conflict, but emphasized that officials must "accord the most important attention on the fundamental right of individuals."
A decision that "is perfect for the situation in Ukraine," Cassis warned, may create a scenario in which "you give much more power to the states, away from the citizen."
Sanctions against Russia have very often been sanctions against Russians, heaping punishment on people who had nothing to do with their nation's brutal invasion of Ukraine. Oligarchs exist in a sort of gray zone since, the logic goes, they have direct connections to President Vladimir Putin and pressuring them effectively pressures him. Many countries have adopted that view and taken their assets accordingly, constitutional restrictions on unreasonable seizures and guarantees of due process be damned.
In March, the U.S. launched the Russian Elites, Proxies, and Oligarchs initiative, which was joined by Australia, Great Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the European Commission. The task force had blocked or seized over $30 billion in Russian assets by late June. The House passed a bill in late April by a 417–8 margin that urged President Joe Biden to sell off oligarchs' assets to provide aid to Ukraine.
With that background, the Swiss president's remarks err on the side of individual rights at a time when many have favored broad and illiberal measures. "Restrictions on freedom are authoritarian, even if government officials try to justify them with hollow claims of being on the side of peace and liberty," writes Reason's J.D. Tuccille. "You need to rethink just what you hope to win if fighting authoritarians pushes your own society toward authoritarianism."
There is always a danger that tactics employed abroad will eventually come home. The war on terror helped spur police militarization in the U.S. as military equipment, technologies, and training reached domestic police. The PATRIOT Act, ostensibly passed to enable government surveillance of terrorists, has been routinely used at home to violate Americans' privacy and due process.
Americans pushing for Russian asset seizures now would do well to remember those downstream implications. Condemning illiberalism doesn't need to entail abandoning liberal values.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Oh, don't be such a spoilsport. What's more important, liberal democracy and the rule of law, or
globalism"the liberal world order" and regime change in Russia?Yeah, I thought so.
Start now earning every week more than $7,000 to 8,000 by doing very simple and easy home based job online. Last month i have made $32,735 by doing this online job just in my part time for only 2 hrs. a day using my laptop. This job is just awesome and easy to do in part time. Everybody can now get this and start earning more dollars online just by follow:-
.
instructions here:☛☛☛ https://extradollars3.blogspot.com/
Telling someone they have to bake the cake isn't just commandeering their property, but also their very person.
So forgive me if I find Fiona to be a tad bit less than credible on this matter.
No one should have their private property confiscated merely for being a Russian Citizen or ethnic Russian.
However. Putin and his Putineers should be forced to pay reparations for the damage they have done to Ukraine after they're sent running with their tails between their ass cheeks.
If Putin and the Putineers confiscate property from their fellow Russians to pay those reparations, then the moral onus is back on Putin & Company and hopefully the Russians will rise against their oppressors.
Meanwhile. none of these moral questions would arise if Putin had never invaded Ukraine. And the only way Putin can escape justice is with that Makarov in his pocket aimed at his basal ganglia lizard-brain.
The political party that Cassis belongs to has exactly the sort of pragmatic classical liberal mindset (FDP.Liberal) that is missing from American politics. But that can be very successful.
The Democrats were that kind of pay for a while: fairly business friendly and socially liberal.
Then Obama happened.
I thought the answer was to fly all the Ukrainians to the US for a lifetime of welfare benefits and any other demands they had. Who stole Fiona's password?
Ukrainians that that have the best farm land in the world and who are duct-taping grenades onto rockets to blast Putin's APCs would piffle at a fucking EBT card!
Just let private U.S. Citizens send them arms and Intel and help and they'll be happy in their own land.
You have to ensure the citizens are protected against the power of the state. This is what we call liberal democracies
Am I the only one shocked to see such words from the head of state of a Liberal Democracy?
There is a good deal of self interest there, given that Switzerland is where every despot, revolutionary, and dictator keeps the money they loot from their countries.
So how do we get our politicians self interested in our property rights?
[redacted]
Switzerland is also where oppressed peoples and dissenters historically fled with their assets and lives. Ludwig and Margit Von Mises escaped the Nazis in Austria via an apartment in Switzerland as did many other European Jews, and in the Civil Rights Era, Martin Luther King, Jr. had a Swiss bank account.
Refuge and privacy are a mixed bag.
It isn't something you hear a lot from politicians. But it is in fact exactly what "liberal democracy" means.
And if you don't, perhaps you're just the same as seizing a WNBA player for having a benign substance she's probably travelled with countless times. Perhaps, I dunno, you're bunch of raging hypocrite, and the way to win isn't to continue exhort your team above all else, but to actually stand for something people can get behind.
So this guy leads a nation, and has never heard of the (U.S.) concept of asset forfeiture?
Accusation implies guilt, everyone knows that.
#believeall - - - whoops, can't use the character string w-o-m-e-n any more.
A thief by any other name is still a thief. Asset forfeiture is without any doubt thievery. The fact that its politically motivated just makes it worse.
Of course, this is also the country that hid Nazi gold and stolen art for decades, all the time knowing exactly where it came from and how it was gotten.
And the US is the country that confiscated assets of the German chemical industry during WW1 and built our pharma industry on that. Including chemicals that we still patent - insulin, oxycodone , etc
Maybe Switzerland shouldn't be the one taking point on defending the property rights of dictators...
Invading another country, killing their civilians and shelling their cities to rubble also violate property rights. My caring about the property of rich Russians is zero.
Because of course every Russian is guilty of the crimes of any Russian. Leave it to the collectivist to explain how to justify atrocities.
Should we start murdering the Jews because several of them are wealthy, comrade?
Two wrongs make a right?
Nothing says property rights like collectivism.
The way a liberal democracy confiscates assets is via some sort of due process that errs on the side of nonconfscation.
Not on defining an enemy. Stoking an emotion based case of evil v a righteous cause. And then creating arbitrary coercive measures to execute it all. That way lies - Putin.
"U r eNemIEs bEcaUsE oF uR rAcE"
So woke, Shrike.
Yeah, the Swiss know all about keeping money for shady people.
Let me guess, the Democrats are lowering their finger that always pointed to Scandinavia as socialist paradises.
Switzerland is NOT Scandinavia.
Democrats don't know that.
Switzerland, Sweden, what’s the difference. — Average woke youngster.
But are they democratic socialist?
Oh, and look what the Biden Admin is doing:
Justice Dept. sues Arizona over requiring proof of citizenship to vote
I would like to see the process/results of that investigation.
He shoved his head up his ass and asked the turd how many times it voted and the results came back as less than 10 so no discernable fraud found.
Well, they cold just show the easily obtained and inexpensive permit to exercise other rights protected by the US Constitution.
Our government is more corrupt than Russia's
Bullshit. Every state has ID you can get for low cost or even free. Anyone who doesn't have and ID is doing it willfully.
Everybody can get a RealID easily.
So how does this justify unrestricted immigration for Swiss, or Russians, or whatever down-trodden group Fiona honored with yet another flag in front of her shared apartment?
It's just civil asset forfeiture...
https://twitter.com/TheRealKeean/status/1544667366528876547?t=xkPTNuVaq_DfLl7ttyR2Yw&s=19
Protesters are surrounding the police station that is detaining the child that was shot at and arrested last night. They are calling it attempted murder.
[Video]
https://twitter.com/bennyjohnson/status/1544731632778854401?t=ba8msKtLCdnMPs_ggSJLug&s=19
Black Republican pastor running for Congress just dropped an ad where he fights the KKK with an AR-15.
HOLY SMOKES
[Video]
Subtle homage to the Malcolm X photo at 0:15?
I want to vote for him.
But it's okay for Russia to seize Ukrainian assets (and Ukraine)?
But it's ok for Ukraine to seize Crimea, Luhansk, and Donetsk assets and people?
"You have to ensure the citizens are protected against the power of the state. This is what we call liberal democracies."
Too bad the Russians don't play by these rules.
It is called theft.
But the Constitution's Fourth Amendment doesn't allow the US government to take things belonging to oligarchs just by putting them on a sanctions list.
Criminal asset forfeiture can only be used upon a conviction. And if a person can't stand trial, they can't be convicted.
So, we have civil asset forfeiture.
Your tax dollars will pay for the yacht's upkeep
Earlier in Russia's war, Swiss authorities seized some properties and froze some assets. But in remarks delivered on Tuesday, Swiss President Ignazio Cassis bristled at the Ukrainian plan to seize more Russian assets.
So, maybe the story is badly written and they already seized Russian government funds and now they're talking about private funds? It's unclear to me.
Lets be honest, every totalitarian mass murderer on the planet probably has a Swiss account. They can make any justifications they want for that, but the fact is they don't care how you got the money. If you don't ask, they won't tell.
Lastly, and I feel this is actually pretty important, it's a governments job to protect their citizens rights. It's not generally expected that a government is there to protect the rights of people who aren't in that country and never have been. That's literally American global police style 'liberalism' and it's been a pretty big failure over the last century.
If you want people to invest in your country, you better protect their property rights.
Do you actually mean to say that a country, should one exist, that respects the rights and freedom of its people, should be able to do whatever it wants outside of its borders no matter the legality or morality and if that country chooses to be lawless outside its borders, would truly respect the law in its borders? You seem to believe that a rabid dog only bite those you don't like.
Contemporary western liberalism is not the same thing as liberal democracy.
The fact that the U.S. and the West have been imperfect in implementing the ideas of Individual Rights and Limited Government does not mean we give up trying...certainly not to tyrants like Putin and the Putineers. Emperor Xi, Kim Jung-Un, the Ayatollahs and Mullahs of Iran, or the shaky Saudi Sheikh's.
One of the core tenets of the U.S. and the West is also that we are volitional beings and that our course is not pre-set. The future does not have to be like the past if only we act to make it so.
So much for "Predestination " "Dialectical historical necessity," and "the urge of the blood," eh. Goldie?
If the Russian citizen doesn't believe in inalienable rights for others, I don't believe in them for him.
Then you don't believe in inalienable rights. What you describe is exactly alienation of rights.
Dizzle a psychotic bigot consumed with hatred of Russians.
Thus they're "communists" because original collective sin. His analysis is basically CRT (Critical Russo Theory) and is far more marxist (dialectical, historic materialist) than the pragmatic and relative perspective he rails against.
This makes it easy for him to believe what our media and State Department says about Russia, even if able to admit their fundamental dishonesty and marxist behavior in all other aspects of their being.
It's actually kinda fascinating to witness.
I've never before seen this undiluted, cartoon old South style racism in contemporary thought before Dizzle started talking about Russia.
https://wikileaks.org/ciav7p1/
You're right about all of the above and Americans should fight against these predations by known Totalitarian enemies. But the libertarian-minded shouldn't exercise acts of war and confiscation against anyone not responsible for Putin and the Putineers' atrocities.
And boycotting Tchaikovsky's music, Pushkin's literature, Vodka, and Russian dressing is just ludicrous and useless. We should be sending Ukrainians care packages with these items to boost their spirits, fill their bellies, and for wartime barter!
(You'll notice I always distinguish Putin and the Putineers from ordinary ethic Russian nationals, many of whom oppose Putin in Russia and many of whom have fought against Putin in Ukraine from day one of the invasion.)
We could have fought World War II against Hirahito without detaining the U.S. Japanese Neisei and we did fight Hitler and Mussolini without oppressing German-Americans and Italian-Americans. We can do the same against our present enemies while still leaving people of good will alone.
My response to anyone who denies inalienable Individual Rights is a paraphrase of Gary Cooper's famous line from The Virginian:
"You wanna call me a slave. SMILE!"
https://youtu.be/QlyUeUz1awU
"YEEE-EP!"
As for Fentanyl deaths, those deaths are as much on the hands of U.S. Drug Warriors who banned opioids as on the hands of Red Chinese Commissars.
Everything that kills pain should be legal and over-the-counter to all consenting adults and we should be free to grow opium domestically and genetically-modify drug plants so that we can make drugs that kill pain and not people.
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job (wby-14) achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>>>>>>>>> http://payout11.tk
How the hell can you call a person who advocates property confiscation, a patriot? That is socialism, Marxism.
Who are "they barely condemned it.."? Or, how does one "...err on the side of individual rights..."? EVER?
But you have Biden and congress on your side, so you must be right.