Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is convinced that Russia's war against Ukraine will end in 2025, either through peace talks or the destruction of one of the warring parties. Source: European Pravda,
Prime Minister of Hungary Viktor Orban has stated that, in his opinion, the war in Ukraine will end in 2025, the Hungarian media resource Magyar Nemzet reports. Orban outlined two possible scenarios for the end of the conflict: either "peace negotiations" between the warring sides or the "destruction" of one of the sides involved in the war.
Unlike Trump, Orban needed two terms in opposition to climb back to the summit. He suffered another painful defeat in 2006, and the post-communists—socialist in name only—seemed unassailable, particularly with enjoying widespread Western support.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has accused the European Union of refusing to acknowledge the reality of Ukraine's military situation, claiming that the bloc's strategy is prolonging the conflict without achieving any meaningful results.
Russian gas flows through Ukraine stopped in the early hours of Wednesday after a transit deal between the two countries expired in the wake of Moscow’s full-scale invasion.
BUDAPEST, December 24. /TASS/. The armed conflict in Ukraine will end in 2025, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said in an interview with the Magyar Nemzet newspaper. "The war [in Ukraine ...
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will convene the final meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group next Thursday before President-Elect Donald Trump takes office on Jan. 20.
Hungarian PM Viktor Orban has accused Brussels of ignoring the reality of the conflict and urged for diplomacy over military aid Read Full Article at RTcom
Austria, Hungary, Slovakia, as well as Moldova, are reliant on the steady flow of energy through Ukraine. Now that that is no longer possible, the only route remaining into Europe from Russia is via the TurkStream pipeline and the BlueSteam pipeline, under the Black Sea.
Russian gas exports via Ukraine came to a halt on New Year's Day, after Kyiv had refused to renew a transit deal hailing this as "Russia's biggest defeat." But some EU countries a
Peter Magyar accused Prime Minister Viktor Orban of turning Hungary into "the EU's poorest, most corrupt nation."
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has criticized the European Union for its refusal to acknowledge the reality of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, accusing EU leaders of being in denial about the failure of their strategy.