Latest News

Putin hosts Hungary Orban to discuss energy and Ukraine

On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomed Hungarian Prime Minster Viktor Orban to Moscow. This was a rare visit of an EU and NATO leader. He said he would be pleased for Budapest host a Russia-U.S. Summit with President Donald Trump.

Orban called for detailed discussions on Russian oil and natural gas supplies.

The Hungarian president, who met Putin for the fourteenth time, maintained close ties to the Kremlin, despite Russia’s war in Ukraine. This led to 19 rounds of EU sanction and a sharp reduction in the reliance on Russian oil. He has often questioned Western aid to Kyiv.

Orban who has also warm relations with Trump was scheduled to host a Putin and Trump summit in October, but the U.S. president pulled out saying that he didn't want it to waste time.

In televised remarks Putin thanked Orban for the offer of the venue and told him he still welcomed the meeting to Budapest.

The talks took place as Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff prepared to meet Putin in Moscow in the next week to renew efforts to end this war.

Orban stated that "we hope very much" that the peace offers on the table would lead to peace and a ceasefire. He had earlier posted on Facebook that he would be visiting Moscow to "ensure Hungary's supply of energy for the winter and in the next year."

After Orban made a strong case for relief during an amicable meeting with Trump in Washington, the U.S. granted Hungary an exemption to sanctions so that it could use Russian oil and natural gas.

A potentially unwelcome move for Moscow is that Hungary signed a nuclear cooperation pact with the U.S. for the purchase of fuel and technology to store spent fuel in Paks 1, a Russian-built facility south of Budapest.

Rosatom, the Russian nuclear company, is building a new extension for its plant. The project was originally planned in 2014 but has been delayed by years.

The Foreign Ministry of Hungary said that Hungary imported more than 7 billion cubic meters of natural gas and 8.5 million tons of crude from Russia in 2018.

Putin said Hungary's position regarding the Ukraine war was "balanced". He also stated that bilateral trade fell by 23% due to "external sanctions" last year, but would recover by 7% by 2025.

(source: Reuters)