Russia & FSU

Ukraine and EU ‘already lost’ – Orban

Hungary’s leader says the West has pursued a failed strategy in Ukraine and is urging a return to diplomacyUkraine and EU ‘already lost’ – Orban

Ukraine and EU ‘already lost’ – Orban

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. © Getty Images / Klaudia Radecka;  NurPhoto

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said both Ukraine and the EU have already lost the conflict with Russia in an interview with the YouTube channel Patriota, which was posted on Wednesday. 

He argued that the war cannot be won on the battlefield and should be resolved through diplomacy.

The Hungarian leader suggested that “there will come a bitter moment when European leaders – apart from us and the Slovaks – will have to admit that they followed a mistaken strategy and were therefore defeated in this war.”

“I believe the EU has already lost the war. Ukraine is holding on – although it’s retreating – but I think Ukraine has also lost,” Orban said.

The Hungarian leader did not specify what specific strategy he was referring to, but his government has consistently opposed EU sanctions targeting Russia and refused to send weapons to Kiev. Budapest has instead called for negotiations to find a diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

Orban stressed that resolving the Ukraine conflict on the battlefield is “impossible” and insisted that it can only be ended through diplomacy, which would also help reduce, or completely prevent, further casualties.

He added that the EU should never have entered this path and that it is now crucial to “slow down, stop, thank the generals for their service, bring back the diplomats and foreign ministers, and begin working toward peace.”

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Orban’s comments come as key EU powers have continued to advocate continued military support for Ukraine. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz suggested on Wednesday that diplomacy has been “exhausted” and vowed to keep sending arms to Kiev. 

France’s defense minister has also called the demilitarization of Ukraine — one of Russia’s key demands — a “red line,” arguing that Kiev must retain a standing army if it ends up being denied NATO membership.

However, other leaders have voiced skepticism. Czech President Petr Pavel, a pro-Russia hardliner, recently said the EU must reconsider its Russia strategy, warning that fighting Moscow “endlessly” would lead to massive casualties and economic damage to both Ukraine and the EU.

Russia has repeatedly denounced Western military backing for Ukraine, saying it only prolongs the war. President Vladimir Putin have also described Europe’s sanctions and attempts to phase out Russian energy as “economic suicide.”

Source

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