Orbán: Ukraine war a pretext for Brussels ‘coup’ against nation states

Change language:

The war, “or rather Brussels’s pro-war policies feeding the war,” is the greatest challenge for Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán told the plenary session of the Forum of Hungarian Lawmakers in the Carpathian Basin (KMKF) in Budapest on Thursday.

Those policies “are only bringing bad things for us and put our future at risk”, Orbán said at the event held in Parliament. “It is at the root of the rise in the price of energy and everything we need for everyday life, and this is why the European economy is ailing.”

Pro-war policies put a great burden on Europe including countries in the Carpathian Basin, he said, because it “siphons resources from development and investments that could be the foundation of the life and cooperation of all Hungarians”.

“This is not the European Union we joined,” Orbán said. “Up to this point, the union was legitimised by its successes which also gave it an identity. That was based on the aim of creating peace and prosperity in Europe after the blood-soaked first half of the 20th century. All of that is in the past now.”

Orbán: Brussels-led European superstate not in Hungarians’ interest

A centralised European superstate led by Brussels is not in the interest of Hungarians or any other peoples in the Carpathian Basin, Orbán said.

He told the session held in Parliament that Hungarians had suffered “many empires” in the past “and we would avoid repeating that if possible”. “We stayed, they fell, but the imperial wounds on Hungarians are still not healed,” he said, pointing to the Ottoman occupation, the world wars and the Trianon Treaty as examples. “These are always the sins of the empires in power, and we should not ask for seconds, not even in Brussels’s garb.”

He said Hungarians’ task was to not allow “the Brussels empire under construction to sit on our necks.”

Orbán: Majority of Europeans do not support fast-tracked Ukraine accession

The majority of Europeans are not in favour of fast-tracking Ukraine’s accession to the European Union, Orbán said. “We need a real masterstroke: while the emperor is at war, we must occupy Brussels; while Brussels is preparing for war, we must strengthen European anti-war initiatives,” the prime minister told the event in Parliament.

Orbán said the Carpathian Basin was more than a place of residence for Hungarians, it was “our historical spiritual and intellectual home”. “To be Hungarian means that our language is our soul, if we lose it, we lose ourselves,” Orbán said. “We didn’t receive our Hungarian survival as a gift; we must fight for it every day. Borders may separate us, but the nation belongs together.”

Praising the KMKF, he said it was important that it was an all-Hungarian body whose members are democratically elected MPs. He also welcomed the fact that Hungarian organisations in Transylvania and Vojvodina had been successful in their respective elections, proving the need for and the success of ethnic politics.

Orbán also said the war, “or rather Brussels’s pro-war policy feeding the war,” was the greatest challenge for Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin.

Those policies “are only bringing bad things for us and put our future at risk”, Orbán said. “It is at the root of the rise in the price of energy and everything we need for everyday life, and this is why the European economy is ailing.”

Pro-war policies put a great burden on Europe, including countries in the Carpathian Basin, he said, because it “siphons resources from development and investments that could be the foundation of the life and cooperation of all Hungarians”.

“This is not the European Union we joined,” Orbán said. “Up to this point, the union was legitimised by its successes which also gave it an identity. That was based on the aim of creating peace and prosperity in Europe after the blood-soaked first half of the 20th century. All of that is in the past now.”

“The legendary Western quality of life is now gone,” Orbán said, arguing that it was impossible to have a high quality of life in places “with masses of migrants”, where people lost their sense of homeliness, and where energy costs were twice or four times higher than two or three years earlier.

He said the European Union was “no longer legitimised by successes”, and something else was needed, which was why Brussels wanted to make it Europe’s new goal “to clash with Russia in the east”. He said “Brussels’s war propaganda” insisted that Russia could attack EU and even NATO countries, and only a preemptive strike could stop it. “In their minds the war in Ukraine is itself that preemptive strike, and the Ukrainian army is already what is stopping Russia from occupying Europe,” he added.

Continue reading