Slovakia has lined up with Hungary in a widening dispute with Ukraine and the European Union over energy, aid and sanctions.
Speaking on Monday, Prime Minister Robert Fico echoed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s hard line, backing pressure on Ukraine over the suspended Druzhba pipeline and warning that Slovakia could reconsider its support for Kyiv on key issues.
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Hungary and Slovakia, whose leaders have maintained closer ties with Moscow than most EU governments, blame Kyiv for an outage on the Druzhba pipeline, which supplies their refineries with Russian crude pumped through Ukraine.
Fico’s Moscow ties raise concerns
Over the past year, Fico has repeatedly signaled in meetings and public remarks that Slovakia intends to keep importing Russian gas, while sharply criticizing European Union energy policy. At his most recent face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Beijing in September 2025, Fico said Slovakia was “extremely interested in standardization of relations” with Russia.
That position runs directly against EU policy, which aims to end dependence on Russian energy in response to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
While much of the EU has treated the war as a reason to decouple from Russia, Fico and Orban have moved in the opposite direction.
Druzhba outage fuels tensions
The Druzhba pipeline, which runs from Russia through Ukrainian territory to Slovakia and Hungary, is at the heart of the dispute. It has been out of service since late January, when Ukraine said a Russian drone strike damaged infrastructure in western Ukraine.
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