Putin og Xi Jinping har mye å glede seg over for tiden. (Red.)
European leaders seethe
over Putin-Orbán meeting
Czech president
calls on western capitals not to fall for Russian leader’s tactic to break
European unity
Lili Bayer in Brussels
Fri 20 Oct 2023 06.00 CEST
European leaders must not “fall” for
the tactics of Vladimir Putin, the Czech president, Petr Pavel, has said, two
days after Hungary’s prime minister shook hands with Russia’s leader.
Viktor Orbán, in a rare move for the
leader of a country that belongs to the EU and Nato, met Putin in Beijing on
Tuesday for what the Hungarian leader’s office described as a discussion on
energy cooperation and peace.
Hungary has long been criticised for
democratic backsliding at home and its Russia- and China-friendly policies
abroad.
Its foreign minister, Péter
Szijjártó, routinely visits Moscow. And in a move that has frustrated its
allies, Hungary – along with Turkey – has yet to ratify Sweden’s application
for Nato membership.
Orbán
and Putin’s meeting this week left officials in western capitals seething. In a
statement on Thursday, Pavel, a former Nato general, said: “As it has been
repeatedly shown, Putin does not meet European leaders with the aim of
achieving peace in Ukraine. Peace can be achieved without any negotiations on his
part simply by ceasing attacks and withdrawing his troops from Ukrainian
territory.
“He is only holding these meetings
with the aim of breaking the unity of European countries and the entire
democratic world. We should not fall for his tactics.”
On Wednesday, the Estonian prime
minister, Kaja Kallas, told Reuters that images of the Hungarian prime minister
shaking hands with Putin were “very, very unpleasant” and defied logic.
The
US ambassador in Budapest, David Pressman, also sharply criticised the meeting. “Hungary’s leader chooses to stand
with a man whose forces are responsible for crimes against humanity in Ukraine,
and alone among our allies,” he wrote on social media. “While Russia strikes
Ukrainian civilians, Hungary pleads for business deals.”
Germany’s
ambassador to Hungary, Julia Gross, echoed this. “So – Putin must end his war of aggression
against Ukraine, end the bombardment of civilians, the shelling of schools and
hospitals, the kidnapping of children?” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “That
was meant and discussed, surely?”
Orbán was in Beijing for an international forum on the Chinese president, Xi Jinping’s, belt and road infrastructure initiative.
A spokesperson for the Hungarian
government, Zoltán Kovács, hit back at critics: “The stance of Hungary
regarding Russia and the war in Ukraine has been clear from the get-go. We
always advocated for open and transparent dialogue with the parties involved to
assist in finding a peaceful solution to this bloody conflict.
“I find a certain amusement in how
these politicians flock to criticise the Hungarian government and our openly
declared interest in maintaining a diplomatic relationship with Russia, while
their moral superiority is a facade at best,” he added.
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