Already this year, Ukraine could receive $4 billion from Russian assets frozen by the EU and the Group of Seven (G7) countries, Deputy Justice Minister Iryna Mudra told Forbes Ukraine in an interview published on Feb. 14. The sum could go up to $15-$18 billion over the next four years, she added. Western countries and other partners immobilized around $300 billion of the Russian Central Bank’s assets at the start of the full-scale invasion. Since then, Washington, Brussels, and Kyiv have discussed legal ways of channeling these funds to aid Ukraine’s reconstruction efforts but have yet to come…