News

Hungarian leader Viktor Orbán acting in the West as Moscow’s man on the inside

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán makes no secret of the fact that although his country is a member of the European Union and of NATO, his closest international friends are Russian President Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump.

And lately he has been taking a starring role in what – to the Biden administration, key European allies, and an invasion-battered Ukraine – looks unsettlingly like the trailer for a geopolitical horror movie.

Why We Wrote This

Hungary is a member of NATO and of the EU, but Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is closer to Vladimir Putin. Will his predictions that the West will abandon Ukraine prove true?

Its plotline? Mr. Trump wins the U.S. election and cuts off all aid to Ukraine, tipping the balance in Russia’s favor. Europe cannot fill the funding gap. And Moscow is emboldened to peel off, Ukraine-style, pro-Russian enclaves in nearby Georgia and Moldova, and then threaten NATO’s eastern flank.

Such a scenario would be even more likely if right-wing populists such as Mr. Orbán fare as well as they are expected to in June’s European Parliament elections.

Ahead of a meeting on Thursday of EU leaders, European Council President Charles Michel said more military aid was needed and that it was time to “put the EU’s economy on a war footing.”

Not least because of something Mr. Orbán said last week: “If the Americans don’t give any money or weapons, the Europeans won’t be able to fund this war on their own.”

His central European country is barely the size of Maine. Its 10 million people represent a tiny fraction of the Continent’s population.

Yet Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has taken a starring role in what – to the Biden administration, key European allies, and an invasion-battered Ukraine – looks unsettlingly like the trailer for a geopolitical horror movie.

The putative plotline:

  • A returning President Donald Trump ends all aid to Ukraine, tilting the military balance dramatically in favor of the Russian invaders.
  • Ukraine’s European backers in the trans-Atlantic NATO alliance fail to fill the gap.
  • The Kremlin is emboldened to peel off, Ukraine-style, pro-Russian enclaves in nearby Georgia and Moldova, and then threaten NATO’s own eastern flank – Poland; the once-Soviet Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia; and Finland and Sweden.

Why We Wrote This

Hungary is a member of NATO and of the EU, but Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is closer to Vladimir Putin. Will his predictions that the West will abandon Ukraine prove true?

Sounds unthinkable?

Previous ArticleNext Article